Browse Tag

Indigenous Canadian stories

An illustration of a Tsimshian woman kneeling beside her bear cubs before hunters, Canadian folktale scene.

The Bear Mother: The Child of Two Worlds

The wind moved softly through the towering cedar trees as a young Tsimshian woman made her way along the forest’s edge, her basket heavy with sweet berries. The sunlight filtered through moss-covered branches, dappling her face with gold and shadow. She was beautiful and proud, the daughter of a respected hunter from a nearby coastal village. Yet that day, pride
A glowing moon with a woman’s face and a hunter gazing upward, inspired by an Inuit folktale from Canada.

The Woman Who Became the Moon

In the beginning, when the world was still young and the sky had no stars, the Inuit people lived beneath a long, endless twilight. The sea shimmered in pale light, and the ice stretched far into the horizon. Every day was the same, without night or dawn, and the people

How the Owl Brought Rest to Humankind

November 1, 2025
In the ancient days, when the first people walked upon the frozen earth and the stars were still finding their places in the sky, humankind did not know the meaning of rest. From the moment of their birth, their eyes remained open. They spoke, worked, hunted, and sang without pause.

Popular

Go toTop