About Water Protector Panelist Marjorie Beaucage

“Teachings of Water Spirit ~ Elders Honoring Water”

May 6, 2023 at ASWM Conference in Syracuse NY

We are honored to present the wisdom of Three Elders grounded by river and sea, beach, marsh and wetland, woodland and prairie, who share their notions of water as spirit. Here, the teachings of the matriarchs they have learned from are entwined within their lives—these three immense elder teachers provide a forthcoming lesson as they come together to reveal their love of Water through song and story. 

Marjorie Beaucage

Marjorie Beaucage is a Two-Spirit Michif elder, filmmaker, artist, activist and educator. She is a land and water protector, a carrier of stories, and of ceremony. Born in Vassar, Manitoba, to a large Métis family, Marjorie’s life’s work has been about creating social change, working to give people the tools for creating possibilities and right relations. Whether in the classroom, community, campsite or the arts, Marjorie’s goal has been to pass on the stories, knowledge and skills that will make a difference for the future. For Marjorie, story is always medicine. Marjorie is an water protector, a water walker and an elder guide for the Saskatchewan River Water Walk (2021-2024), and she shares her story of why water needs our protections.

As an artist, Marjorie has created more than 30 films of Indigenous stories from Indigenous perspectives. These films have been screened in bingo halls and at City Hall, from Northern Labrador to New York. Marjorie sees herself as a change agent, both in her own life and in the lives of those around her. At 70, during a residency at the Santa Fe Art Institute in New Mexico in 2017, Marjorie reflected on a lifetime of art and activism. There, she experimented with Circus Arts and Spoken Word as new forms for sharing her life stories. In 2018, Marjorie was honoured with a retrospective of her work at the imagiNATIVE Film Festival, and with an Artistic Excellence Award from the Saskatchewan Arts Board.

As a Two-Spirit Métis, as an artist-educator and a community organizer, Marjorie takes on the tough topics that need to be discussed. Her work is focused on giving voice to, and creating safe cultural spaces for, traditionally silenced or excluded groups such as Two-Spirit youth, sex workers, survivors of sexual abuse, Indigenous women living with HIV, homeless people, and people who use substances. Marjorie is known on the local, regional and national levels as an Elder/Artivist who speaks truth to power, and who holds space for difference. She has been a Grandmother for Walking With Our Sisters; the Elder for OUT Saskatoon; and the Elder-In-Residence for the University of Saskatchewan Student Union. She has also been called on to be a Knowledge Carrier for national research initiatives that focus on Indigenous women living with HIV, Indigenous Harm Reduction, Indigenous youth who experience sexual and gender-based violence, and post-traumatic stress. In all of these, Marjorie returns to story as medicine, to art as medicine. Looking forward, her revolutionary life story, “Leave some for the birds” will be launched in the spring of 2023.

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