Manitoba Museum has appointed Tabitha Harper as museum adviser on Indigenous relations and reconciliation, a new post created, in part, to acknowledge the role the museum has played in colonization and to demonstrate its commitment to advance decolonization, reconciliation and repatriation in all facets of its work. Read this article for free: Already have an account? To continue reading, please subscribe: * Manitoba Museum has appointed Tabitha Harper as museum adviser on Indigenous relations and reconciliation, a new post created, in part, to acknowledge the role the museum has played in colonization and to demonstrate its commitment to advance decolonization, reconciliation and repatriation in all facets of its work. Read unlimited articles for free today: Already have an account? Manitoba Museum has appointed Tabitha Harper as museum adviser on Indigenous relations and reconciliation, a new post created, in part, to acknowledge the role the museum has played in colonization and to demonstrate its commitment to advance decolonization, reconciliation and repatriation in all facets of its work.
Raised in Kinonjeoshtegon First Nation, located on the west shore of Lake Winnipeg 255 kilometres north of Winnipeg, Harper, 27, attended high school in Winnipeg before graduating with a degree from Red River College Polytechnic’s social innovation and community development program with a major in Indigenous social entrepreneurship. “I’m truly honoured and thankful to have been .
