Some Indigenous belongings may carry particular cultural sensitivity, and so, at the guidance of Elders, hand-drawings, rather than photographs, may have been used to visually represent some, to protect and respect their special nature. For more information about a belonging, please contact the holding repository.
Pipe bag
BHH.02605
- Holding Repository
- Royal Saskatchewan Museum
- Accession Number
- E1330 / unknown-1 / 6975
Some titles and descriptions may contain outdated or inaccurate terminology. The inclusion of any such terminology here is not intended to offend, and only reflects the historic documentation and limited understanding that a holding repository has in association with a particular Indigenous belonging. For more information about a belonging, please contact the holding repository.
The Museums Association of Saskatchewan’s (MAS) work and support reaches lands covered by Treaties 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, & 10 currently known as the Province of Saskatchewan, comprised of the territories of the Nêhiyâwak, Anihšināpēk, Dene, Dakota, Lakota, Michif/Métis, and Nakota Nations. We are committed to focus on repairing the relationships between immigrant Canadians who have settled here over centuries and the First Nations people who have walked these lands since time immemorial. MAS recognizes the roles of museums in perpetuating colonial practices in Canada both directly and indirectly through collection and display practices, policy, and harmful rhetoric. We commit to explore our roles in nurturing meaningful relationships and building understanding. We dedicate our efforts to working together in a spirit of collaboration and reconciliation. We are all treaty people.



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