Rita Joe was a famous Mi’kmaw poet who celebrated her language, culture and way of life. Rita Bernard was born in 1932 in Whycocomagh, Nova Scotia. Orphaned at the age of ten, she soon found herself at the Shubenacadie Residential School. Forbidden to speak her language, she endured mental and physical abuse and left at age 16. She soon met Frank Joe and they married and started a family.
Rita Joe began writing in the mid-1970s. She wrote seven books, including Poems of Rita Joe (1978), Song of Eskasoni (1988) and The Blind Man’s Eyes (published posthumously in 2015).
In 1989, Rita Joe was inducted into the Order of Canada and in 1992, she became a member of the Queen’s Privy Council. She received an Aboriginal Achievement Award in 1997 and doctorates from several East Coast universities. Rita’s husband, Frank, died in 1989 and a year later she was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. She kept writing until her death in 2007, five days after her 75th birthday.
Upon her death, the Globe and Mail named her the Poet Laureate of the Mi’kmaq people.
“I was only a housewife with a dream to bring laughter to the sad eyes of my people”
An immersive symphonic experience celebrating youth, promise and courage, revealed in the compelling and diverse portraits of four women. An immersive symphonic experience celebrating youth, promise… An immersive symphonic experience celebrating youth, promise and courage, revealed in the compelling and diverse portraits of four women.
We asked the teachers and students in five communities across Canada to create a song based on what “I Lost My Talk” means to them… We asked the teachers and students in five communities across… We asked the teachers and students in five communities across Canada to create a song based on what “I Lost My Talk” means to them and their community.