Baskets have been 'a really good friend to our people,' says Indigenous workshop teacher
Kisuhs Perley collected ash wood along the Tobique River for a basket-making workshop

This is part of a series called Ann's Eye, featuring the work of Ann Paul, a Wolastoqey content creator. You can see more Ann's Eye pieces by clicking here.
Making baskets from wood has a deep history in Neqotkuk First Nation, according to Kisuhs Perley.
Indigenous peoples have been weaving wood into baskets for centuries, but after colonization, Perley said families from Neqotkuk, also known as Tobique, used to make baskets and sell them in Maine and to Canadian farmers during potato harvests.
"This is what helped our communities out in a time when farmers in Canada weren't allowed to hire Native people," he said. "These baskets have really been a friend to our people, in good times and bad times, and I think that's why we're such friends with the baskets."
Perley recently taught a two-day basket-making workshop through the Under One Sky Friendship Centre in Fredericton. Scroll through the photos and watch the video to learn more.




Ann's Eye
Photographer Ann Paul brings an Indigenous lens to stories from First Nations communities across New Brunswick. Click here or on the image below to see more of her work.