Citizens of the Shoshone-Bannock nation came together recently to plant seeds. This is part of an effort for future generations to carry on traditional harvesting, while understanding the ties Native languages have to the land. Roselynn Yazzie has the story. High hopes were dashed last month for the family of Edward Spott, a Puyallup boy who died at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in 1896. When the Army opened the gravesite, the remains that were found were not Spott's and no one can say where else in the graveyard they might be. ICT's Stewart Huntington reports. ICT's Correspondent Miles Morriseau took part in Saturday's Orange Shirt Day in Canada. It is a federal holiday there, officially known as National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. ICT's Editor-at-Large Mark Trahant talked with Morriseau.
Broadcast In: English Duration: 0:26:44