Artisan hopes ribbon skirt dolls teach Indigenous girls 'their bodies are sacred, they're not to be abused
By A Mystery Man Writer
Description
Tracy Boucher, from Alexander Cree Nation, has made hundreds of Indigenous dolls wearing ribbon skirts and MMIWG sweaters since October. She wants her dolls to teach Indigenous girls and two-spirited kids ‘they’re not to be abused.’
Issue 02
Safe Issue 1 by Together for Girls - Issuu
Open Letter to the PocaHotties and Indian Warriors this Halloween
Where does the Easter Bunny live? - Netmums
The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Woman Who Toils By Mrs. John
Tracy Boucher's Instagram, Twitter & Facebook on IDCrawl
The Doll Coloring Book: Sew a native ribbon skirt for your doll
Studying the Short-story, by J. Berg Esenwein, A.M. A Project
Issue 02
Tracy Boucher's Instagram, Twitter & Facebook on IDCrawl
Artisan Hopes Ribbon Skirt Dolls Teach Indigenous Girls 'their Bodies Are Sacred, They're Not To Be Abused' CBC News
Dolls and doll making – Page 2 – Annjrippin's Blog
Artisan Hopes Ribbon Skirt Dolls Teach Indigenous Girls 'their Bodies Are Sacred, They're Not To Be Abused' CBC News
Dawn Ashcroft - Indigenous Arts Collective of Canada
from
per adult (price varies by group size)