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Mi'kmaw author's first book showcases traditiona­l practice of sweetgrass picking through her cat

- Hannah Rudderham

Emily Johnson works fulltime with her dad's con‐ struction business, she's an artist who specialize­s in beading, and on the side, she's a doula for expectant parents at Sitansisk, also known as St. Mary's First Nation.

Now, the 24-year-old has added another title to her list - published children's book author and illustrato­r.

Johnson, originally from Listuguj but who grew up in Fredericto­n, wrote and illus‐ trated a book in a class for the two-year Wabanaki visual arts program at the New Brunswick College of Craft and Design, and now that book is in stores across the country.

"When I finally got the book in my hand, I was like, 'holy, I'm publishing a book,'" she said.

The book, Mitzy's First Time Picking Sweetgrass, shows Johnson's cat Mitzy doing the traditiona­l Wabana‐ ki practice of picking sweet‐ grass for the first time at New River Beach.

Pages of watercolou­r paintings show the grey and white cat adventurin­g outside with her mom, Johnson, rolling in the vanilla- and chestnut-scented grass, and learning how to pick it proper‐ ly to leave behind the plant's roots for regrowth.

"It was just three weeks of painting, drawing, hairdryer up to the paper for like all night," she said.

WATCH | Page by page, Mitzy discovers how to pick sweetgrass:

Johnson tries to go sweet‐ grass picking every year, and she also takes her cat on out‐ door adventures frequently, so the pairing of the two made sense.

Sweetgrass, said Johnson, is used for a variety of pur‐ poses, including art, healing and smudging.

Johnson said that during the class where students were tasked with creating a book, her studio co-ordinator Judy Acquin brought in the pub‐ lisher for Fredericto­n-based Monster House Publishing to explain the publishing pro‐ cess.

The program recently formed a partnershi­p with the publisher to bring more In‐ digenous stories to light - and Johnson was the first to have her book published through this partnershi­p.

Acquin said the oral tradi‐ tion course is about story‐ telling and gathering informa‐ tion from community mem‐ bers.

But Acquin said it was im‐ portant to allow students to have the opportunit­y to re‐ lease culturally relevant mate‐ rial to Indigenous communi‐ ties and kids, as well as nonIndigen­ous readers "as a way of learning and understand‐ ing."

Acquin said a few years ago, a student in the class went to Monster House with the book she wrote to see about getting it published and it was. But the partner‐ ship will make it easier to re‐ lease books from the course every two years.

"It's a way of creating al‐ most … their own legacy, their own ... tidbit of who they are as Indigenous people," she said.

"There's a lot of Indige‐ nous books out there that are, you know, Indigenous au‐ thors, Indigenous illustrato­rs, Indigenous content. For me, I really want to take advantage of putting out, as much as possible, content that is rele‐ vant to who we are in the Wa‐ banaki region."

"Wolastoqiy­ik, Mi'kmaq, Passamaquo­ddy - you know, we don't have a lot of that kind of content that is coming from our communitie­s."

Johnson said she hopes to see her book end up in the province's Indigenous schools, including where she went to elementary, Chief Harold Sappier Memorial Ele‐ mentary School.

She said she thinks putting traditiona­l Indigenous stories into a children's book format provides an easier way for kids to feel connected.

"I feel like they'll have more of an understand­ing, feel more connected to them‐ selves and to everything around them."

And Johnson already has her next idea for a children's book, this time featuring her most shy cat (she has three) Meelo.

Meelo is mentioned in Johnson's first book near the end, when Mitzy is excited to bring her sweetgrass back home and share what she's learned with her brother.

Her next book will be a natural continuati­on of the first, with Meelo helping to prepare the sweetgrass to be braided, she said.

As for Mitzy, although she's never actually been sweetgrass picking , Johnson hopes to bring her when the grass is in season next fall.

"I want to do an adapta‐ tion … a real-life Mitzy goes sweetgrass picking," said Johnson.

"When I bring some home, she goes crazy. Like I hang it up and she jumps and jumps trying to eat at the sweet‐ grass.

"I wonder what she would do if she saw a field of them."

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