11-year-old Hudson Mulvihill flips on her trampoline in her backyard in Belleville
Sunshine Tenasco, Anishinaabe from Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg, is an entrepreneur, mother, and water activist who started “Her Braids” to raise awareness of the lack of clean drinking water in First Nations communities within Canada.
A group of friends pass a puck around the ice on Victoria Harbour in Belleville.
Waubageshig Harvey McCue, the founder of the first Indigenous studies program in Canada, at Trent University, photographed near his home in Ottawa, Ont.
Jaden White, from Naotkamegwanning First Nation in Treaty #3: “playing basketball, where I come from it’s not very big so you have to go away from home just to chase what you want.”
Kayenté:ri Emerald LeFort-Cummings, teacher at Totahne Language Nest, in Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory
Grade 9 student Marena Wood dances in Toronto with her classmates from St. Theresa Point, Man. The students participated in "Outside Looking In", a program that brings hip-hop dance instructors to First Nation communities in Northern Ont. and Man.
Waneek Horn-Miller, the first Mohawk woman to compete in the Olympic games, poses for a portrait in her backyard in Ottawa
Patrina Brooks stands in Limitless Brazilian Jujitsu gym in her gi, grasping her blue belt, the second belt in the ranking system
Julie Lalonde’s work as a women’s rights educator includes bystander intervention training, which she says may embolden witnesses to speak up in the face of sexual abuse (Globe and Mail).
Investigative journalist Sam Cooper at his home in Ottawa, Ontario (ProPublica)