36 min

Jenni Lessard Reconcile. Everyday Conversations

    • Government

“The chef coat that you see is actually modeled after the Turkish army. And I think there's a lot of a lot of rules and etiquette, and kitchen ways of being that are actually at odds with indigenous culture. So I'm trying to, I guess you could say decolonize that kitchen experience for people.”

Jenni currently works as the Indigenous Cultural Consultant for the Culinary Team at Wanuskewin Heritage Park. She has been a restaurant owner, caterer, executive chef and sees herself as a food bridge for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Saskatchewan. Listen until the end of the episode to hear an update from Jenni and Wanuskewin.

In our conversation with Jenni we talk about how food can be a tool for reconciliation. Jenni passionately spoke about how the act of reconciliation includes acknowledgment and recognizing that cultural understandings of the land and food have been taken from people. She challenges the listeners to economically support Indigenous businesses and to eat Indigenous food.

Ben Borne and I invited Jenni to have a conversation around these five questions:

1. What is your personal understanding of reconciliation?

2. What experiences have led you to this understanding?

3. Why do you feel reconciliation is important?

4. Does forgiveness have a role in reconciliation? Why or why not?

5. How would you invite people into the reconciliation journey?



Then we recorded her reflections.

*****************************************************

Additional resources to explore:

Wanuskewin

Boreal Heartland

Indigenous culinary association of nations

Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan

*****************************************************

Reconcile: Everyday Conversations is a project of Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan aimed at facilitating conversations among settler/non-Indigenous Canadians around our role in reconciliation. We thank Mennonite Church Saskatchewan for additional funding support.

Project Coordinator: Heather Peters

Co-host: Ben Borne
Recording and Editing: Matthew Hildebrandt
Music by Queen Queen Josephine

“The chef coat that you see is actually modeled after the Turkish army. And I think there's a lot of a lot of rules and etiquette, and kitchen ways of being that are actually at odds with indigenous culture. So I'm trying to, I guess you could say decolonize that kitchen experience for people.”

Jenni currently works as the Indigenous Cultural Consultant for the Culinary Team at Wanuskewin Heritage Park. She has been a restaurant owner, caterer, executive chef and sees herself as a food bridge for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Saskatchewan. Listen until the end of the episode to hear an update from Jenni and Wanuskewin.

In our conversation with Jenni we talk about how food can be a tool for reconciliation. Jenni passionately spoke about how the act of reconciliation includes acknowledgment and recognizing that cultural understandings of the land and food have been taken from people. She challenges the listeners to economically support Indigenous businesses and to eat Indigenous food.

Ben Borne and I invited Jenni to have a conversation around these five questions:

1. What is your personal understanding of reconciliation?

2. What experiences have led you to this understanding?

3. Why do you feel reconciliation is important?

4. Does forgiveness have a role in reconciliation? Why or why not?

5. How would you invite people into the reconciliation journey?



Then we recorded her reflections.

*****************************************************

Additional resources to explore:

Wanuskewin

Boreal Heartland

Indigenous culinary association of nations

Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan

*****************************************************

Reconcile: Everyday Conversations is a project of Mennonite Central Committee Saskatchewan aimed at facilitating conversations among settler/non-Indigenous Canadians around our role in reconciliation. We thank Mennonite Church Saskatchewan for additional funding support.

Project Coordinator: Heather Peters

Co-host: Ben Borne
Recording and Editing: Matthew Hildebrandt
Music by Queen Queen Josephine

36 min

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