Community Champions support the Moose Hide Campaign Day by organizing local events and taking an active role in ending gender-based violence in their community. HOST A KIOSK Hosting a kiosk is one of the most effective ways to raise awareness about the Moose Hide...
Natasha Rainkie’s aspiration to become an Indigenous educator started in elementary school. When she was called over the intercom to go to the ‘Indigenous room’—where non-Indigenous teachers taught about Indigenous culture —her face would grow red in...
The heart of the Moose Hide Campaign is the pin – a small square of moose hide that we offer as a medicine for a social illness impacting all Canadians – namely domestic and gender-based violence against women and children, and particularly indigenous...
Teale Phelps Bondaroff describes himself as an “activist academic.” His impressive breadth of work is hard to whittle down to one category. He’s a Councillor for the District of Saanich. He’s the Director of Research for the marine conservation organization...
The Moose Hide Campaign is an Indigenous-led grassroots movement that started along Canada’s infamous Highway of Tears. This highway runs through the territory of the Carrier peoples where father and daughter Paul and Raven Lacerte were engaged in their annual hunting...