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The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20260403191141/https://shewhoseeks.blogspot.com/2026/04/

Friday, 3 April 2026

Friday Face OFF -- Snowy Owl

For today's Friday Face OFF link party
of art featuring faces, hosted by Nicole of

BERJAYA

I was browsing through an old file folder of
photo prompts and found this forgotten
pen-and-ink sketch of a snowy owl
that I did 3 years ago.

BERJAYA

It's just done on white bond paper
because I intended to redraw it later 
on watercolour paper and then paint it,
but that hasn't happened yet.

Maybe someday? Who knows?

In the meantime, here it is.

[Art © Debra She Who Seeks, 2023;
Photo of art © Debra She Who Seeks, 2026]

Thursday, 2 April 2026

Edmonton and the North-West Rebellion

BERJAYA

In the spring of 1885, the Canadian Government officially took up arms against its citizens for the only time in Canada’s history. The violent, three-month-long North-West Rebellion in what is now the western province of Saskatchewan created widespread unrest right across the Prairies. Led by Louis Riel, many Métis and Indigenous peoples rose up to protect their land and rights against the Canadian Government's acquisition of the vast North-West landmass from the Hudson's Bay Company.

Louis Riel had led a similar resistance movement known as the Red River Uprising in what is now Manitoba fifteen years earlier in 1869-1870. He negotiated the creation of provincial status for Manitoba. Today, Louis Riel is quite rightly regarded as a hero in my home province of Manitoba and our personal Father of Confederation. (I previously blogged about him here).

I never thought about Alberta (where I now live) as having much connection to the 1885 North-West Rebellion because all the battles took place in next-door Saskatchewan. But it seems that there was indeed fallout here in Edmonton and throughout northern Alberta, which I just learned about at a recent exhibition at the nearby St. Albert Musée Héritage Museum.

BERJAYA

[Photo © Debra She Who Seeks, 2026]

The most fascinating artefact in the exhibition was one of Louis Riel's journals dating from his years spent in exile in the United States as a wanted man after the Red River Uprising. Riel returned from the States to lead the North-West Rebellion. Following its failure, he was tried for treason and executed in Regina.

I also attended a lecture at the Musée Héritage Museum, advertised rather luridly (and anachronistically) as --

BERJAYA

The lecture was specifically about how Edmonton reacted to the 1885 unrest. Named at that time "Fort Edmonton," it was still a Hudson's Bay Company fur-trading outpost with some additional white settlers rounding out its tiny population. Far away from any actual battles, Fort Edmonton was nevertheless rife with fear and rumours stoked by its local newspaper and its very real isolation -- a full day's journey from the area's only North-West Mounted Police detachment (forerunners of the RCMP). Supposed secret ambushes and a feared imminent Indigenous attack (completely unfounded) sent Fort Edmonton into a panic. All the settlers fled as refugees to nearby St. Albert. They stayed for a week, realized everything was okay, and then went home again. A citizens militia was formed and a few Canadian Government soldiers arrived by train in Calgary and rode north to Fort Edmonton. Apparently, one night a cat was fired upon as a suspected insurgent and that's as close to real danger as anyone got.

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

April Full Moon Altar: Selene-Luna

BERJAYA

This month's altar celebrates the Greek Goddess of the Moon, Selene, whose Roman equivalent is Luna. Selene later became identified with Artemis and Luna with Diana. In western mythology, the moon and its phases have always been a powerful symbol of the Divine Feminine.

On the silver beaded altar cloth representing the full moon, flanked by silver candles, there are three representations of the Moon Goddess. A statue of Selene is crowned with a halo containing the waxing, full, and waning moon phases corresponding to the manifestations of the Triple Goddess -- the Maiden, the Mother, and the Crone -- and to the three stages of women's lives as well. 

Selena is my most recent goddess statue. I found her three months ago in a spirituality store here in Edmonton.

BERJAYA

The second representation on the altar is the Moon Goddess as the waxing crescent Maiden moon. She is a weatherized ceramic piece designed to be placed outdoors, ideally perhaps in a round Moon Garden consisting entirely of white flowers? I acquired this piece at least 25 years ago at a craft sale.

BERJAYA

The third represenation of the Moon Goddess is a beautiful brooch handmade by artisans in Bali and given to me by my mother and sister for my 50th birthday nearly 20 years ago. Set in sterling silver, the Goddess's serene face is carved from polished white bone, her headdress and earrings contain amethysts, and her body is made of semi-precious gemstones -- paua shell from New Zealand, a round rainbow moonstone, and purple charoite from Siberia. Isn't she gorgeous?

BERJAYA

As well as the Full Moon, today marks the beginning of Passover, which begins this evening and runs until April 9th. I wish Passover Blessings to all my Jewish readers! Enjoy your Passover Seder!

BERJAYA

[Photos #1-#4 © Debra She Who Seeks, 2026;
Photo #5 is courtesy of the internet]