Following a long and difficult process, the Qualicum First Nation earlier this year celebrated the reawakening of their native language, pentlѻýach. The last member of their community who was well-versed in the language passed away in the 1940s, and it was the considered extinct.
ѻýOver the years they pulled together and began to do the work of really reviving the language, which involves gathering of materials that have been documented about the language from various linguists and anthropologists over time and beginning to relearn that language and to begin teach it to the community.ѻý
Isabella Lepage earned her black belt in taekwondo, along with a group of 11 other students ranging in ages up to 45.
Her kicks may not reach the heights of the martial artists around her, and her punches donѻýt have the same power as the adults three times her age. But Isabella is their equal, and she has the belt to prove it.
Vernonѻýs Shanda Hill put a happy face on a large chunk of ice in Coldstreamѻýs Kalamalka Lake, then jumped into the eye of the face for a refreshing weekend dip. ѻýOver 30 feet, an estimated 18,000 pounds and four solid inches thick, hand-chopping this smile with our axes was a good old-fashioned fun time,ѻý said Hill as she posted the event on her social media accounts.
ѻýIt took a team effort and we all came together and made it happen.ѻý
On a Saturday in September, South Surrey teen Annika Van Vliet was one of 500 people to be featured on a jumbotron in New Yorkѻýs Times Square. It was the launch of the 2023 Buddy Walk, an annual event to raise awareness for Down syndrome in the U.S. The following month, she got to walk the runway during Paris Fashion Week.
Annika was diagnosed with Down syndrome at just 15 weeks in-utero, and is currently ambassador for both Canadian Down Syndrome Society and the Down Syndrome Resource Foundation.
A Nanaimo woman took the term ѻýknock yourself outѻý literally when she entered ѻý and won ѻý a cheese-chase race during her trip to Europe.
Delaney Irving, 19, had been travelling with a friend and they decided theyѻýd go watch a cheese-rolling race near Gloucester, England, that annually draws hundreds of people to watch and compete.
ѻýMy strategy was to just roll as soon as I felt myself falling and I ended up rolling down most of the hill. At the very end of the hill I got back up onto my feet, but soon after fell on my head and rolled across the finish line unconscious.ѻý
Originally from Williams Lake, blind man Scott Rees successfully swam across the Georgia Strait in just under 11 hours on July 23 to raise more than $125,000 for Canadian Guide Dogs for the Blind.
Rees admitted he felt the grind of the 11-hour swim and agreed it was the hardest swim heѻýd ever done. His longest swim before that was just under five hours when he was training for the Georgia Strait.
Nobody knows exactly how many quilts one 100-year-old Chilliwack woman has made, but it is a lot. Anne Schaefer doesnѻýt quite know when she started quilting but it was sometime after arriving in Chilliwack in 1952. Sheѻýs been with the church for 70 years.
Until four years ago, the quilts would be packaged up and sent overseas to refugee camps. Now, they stay in B.C. and are sent to different societies and facilities, such as treatment centres, transitional housing programs and permanent housing programs.
Thirteen years after Erin Scott first played paintball, she became captain of Canadaѻýs first all-womenѻýs pro paintball team, the Northern Lights.
The team is made up of seven other players ѻý four of them also from B.C.ѻýs Fraser Valley, one from Nova Scotia, one from Ottawa and one from Manitoba ѻý all dead set on growing the sport.
At 82 years and 43 days old, Bruce Ives performed his record-breaking headstand.
He learned how to balance on his head more than 65 years ago from a high school physical education teacher in Leamington, Ont, and while in his 60s and playing with his grandchildren, he tried again. Since then, he has made it a tradition to do a headstand every year on his birthday, June 25.
She did the work. She earned the honour. All that remained was determining a way to give Valerie Bob the proper recognition.
Bob, 66, was bedridden with terminal cancer at the time of the ceremony, so traditional thinking went out the window to make the special moment still happen. Doctors Dorothy Christian and George Agnes from the Graduate Studies office at SFU came to her home on Penelakut Tribeѻýs Tsussie Reserve to present Bob with her degree, with a circle of proud family members and friends in attendance.
Two young hip-hop performers and recording artists are bringing the movement out from underground as they gear up for a concert in the Kootenays at the end of the month.
That both Strange 2ruth and Ray the Nihilist are Indigenous gives the music they perform a special resonance. In many ways, rap and hip hop, coming out of the urban Black experience, is a natural fit for modern Indigenous musical expression. Itѻýs like the Blues, a voice of the Black experience that grew beyond cultural borders to become a music for everyone.
Seven-year-old Lucia Elizabeth Dell became the youngest-ever recipient of the B.C. Emergency Health Servicesѻý Vital Link Award in October.
She alerted her mother and lifeguards at a Nanaimo pool after noticing something was wrong with her grandpa.