January 4th is National Ribbon Skirt Day.
National Ribbon Skirt Day traces back to the poignant experience of Isabella Kulak, a young Indigenous girl from Cote First Nation who, during her elementary school’s “formal dress day,” wore a ribbon skirt only to be shamed and told it didn’t count as “formal dress.” The incident sparked a wave of reactions on social media, led to a school march, and fuelled a collective effort urging the federal government to officially acknowledge the cultural significance of the ribbon skirt.
In response, Senator Mary Jane McCallum championed Bill S-219, titled “An Act respecting a National Ribbon Skirt Day,” as a tribute to Isabella Kulak. The bill garnered unanimous support in Parliament and was successfully enacted into law in December 2022, with the first National Ribbon Skirt Day acknowledged on January 4, 2023.
Ribbon Skirt Day is a significant occasion that pays homage to the strength, resilience, and cultural diversity of Indigenous women across Canada. The Ribbon Skirt holds profound cultural significance, representing a powerful symbol of identity, and empowerment through traditional regalia.
Many different Indigenous groups across Turtle Island have a tradition of making and wearing Ribbon Skirts, most usually for ceremony. Over time they have evolved from buckskin Plains dresses to include skirts made from leather and fur or colourful fabrics. Ribbon Skirts are worn during ceremony or Sweat Lodge as well as during important times in a woman’s life like pregnancies or her moon-time. Ribbon Skirts symbolize sacred traditions and are an embodiment of resilience to colonial cultural erasure.