In 1986, the United Church of Canada made an apology to the aboriginal peoples of this land. The moderator at the time said in part, "We confused western ways and culture with the depth and breadth and length and height of the gospel of Christ....We tried to make to make you like us and in so doing we helped to destroy the vision that made you what you were...We ask you to forgive us and to walk together with us in the Spirit of Christ so that our peoples may be blessed and God's creation healed."
The apology was received by a representative group of First Nations people. Two years later when the church's general council met again, an elder said that the apology was acknowledged but not accepted. She said that aboriginal people within the church "hope and pray that the apology is not symbolic but that these are the words of action and sincerity...."
Baker Street Women's Club has donated $25,000 to Community Foundation Grey Bruce to create a permanent endowed fund that will provide an annual donation to the Residential Hospice of Grey Bruce and the Owen Sound Regional Hospital Foundation in perpetuity.
The Community Foundation Grey Bruce will match this generous donation with an additional $10,000 from its Matched Funding Program, which matches fifty cents on every dollar for new and existing funds up to $10,000 per fund. It is fitting that the Matched Funding Program was created from a generous donation from the Estate of the late Betty McKay, a founder of the Baker Street Women's Club. A grassroots local organization with nearly 120 paid members, the Club has been faithfully playing cards together for more than 30 years in Owen Sound, Ontario.
"The Baker St. Women's Club is very fortunate and pleased to be able to financially support local agencies through Community Foundation Grey Bruce" said Mary Jobe, founding member of the Club.
Tell us your doll story and if possible, share a photo or painting of the doll to help
bring the personality of your doll to life. Let your story join our story at the Owen
Sound Emancipation Festival Speakers' Forum this year, July 31st 2015 at Grey Roots.
In 400 words or less, introduce us to your Doll. Why this doll was important to you.
Do you still have it? What would you have missed if you never had this doll? What
did others think of your doll? Was it your doll or did someone else own this doll, like
your sister, a friend, an aunt or mother?
You can refer to all or just some of the ideas or offer some of your own poignant ideas on the doll in your life.
The Grey Sauble Conservation Authority is holding its annual tree seedling and landscape sale Saturday, April 25 from 8 a.m. until noon at their Administration Centre on Inglis Falls Road. A wide range of tree species are available, including white birch, oaks, maples, spruces, tulip trees, elderberrys, apple, cherry, plum and pear, as well as variety of native flowers. Come early for best selection, and bring your own bucket or bag. Prices range from $1 to $45 and funds go to the Grey Sauble Conservation Foundation.
by Cathy Hird
Do you know how to find out if someone is truly a Canadian? Stomp on their toe and wait for them to say "Sorry." Only a Canadian apologizes when someone else bumps into them.
After three years in Ghana, my daughter absorbed their use of "Sorry." When I mention something that did not go right, she says, "Sorry." This is not a personal apology, but rather an expression of lament, her sense that it is regrettable that this happened.
"Sorry" is a helpful word in our relationships. When we hurt someone by what we say or do, it helps if we apologize. We do have to act on our regret after saying "Sorry" but acknowledging the hurt is important.
Sometimes when someone says they are sorry, we are not sure how deeply they mean what they say. It seems that they just want to hurry past the difficult moment. They know that we are upset, but they don't actually think what they did was wrong. They do not understand our reaction. Perhaps they have done the same thing before, and we expect they will do it again. At times like these, we do not think they really are sorry.
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