kâniyâsihk culture camps are founded by siblings Kevin Lewis and Darla Campbell, with their mother, Matilda Lewis (photo: kâniyâsihk culture camps)
kâniyâsihk culture camps

One of Canada’s longest running culture camps continues to light fires

May 13, 2026 | 5:14 PM

Every summer for the past six years, during some of the warmest days of the year, kâniyâsihk culture camps hosts a special water gathering. The event, much like all of their operations, is intended to be a fully immersive and spiritual experience.

Participants will be toured around the beautiful and remote Ministikwan Lake, where they will hear traditional stories while visiting sacred sites around the lake. For two-and-a-half days, the guides fully immerse the participants into language, land, learning – and an era, that to some, has been forgotten.

The next two-and-a-half days is somewhat of a celebration, with a full moon ceremony, fashion and talent show, and market where individuals trade and barter hand-made items from their communities.

“This is the culture that we’re trying to save. When people come out and visit us, we call them ‘omanigaw’ – they bring laughter, they bring healing,” said Kevin Lewis, co-director of kâniyâsihk culture camps.

“It’s a very spiritual experience. We want to raise awareness of the importance and our history with our water.”

The water gathering is held every year in July (photo: kâniyâsihk culture camps)

The water gathering is just one of the many offerings from kâniyâsihk culture camps – a year-round land-based educational camp that has been operating in Saskatchewan for 25 years.

The camps started small, focusing on fishing, hide-tanning, and harvesting to prepare for the infamous prairie winters.

“Surviving winter is an art, it’s become a way of life. As soon as it’s spring, you’re getting ready for the winter again,” said Lewis.

“In a way, these camps are like our safe haven because you stay connected and grounded. You understand food sovereignty and security.”

Food preservation and sovereignty is taught at kâniyâsihk culture camps

Since beginning 25 years ago, kâniyâsihk culture camps have expanded into a diverse set of offerings while maintaining their focus on being deeply connected with the land. Their camps, guided by Elders and knowledge keepers, all whom are fluent in Cree, feature programs like wilderness first-aid, food preservation, hide-tanning, and paddle and hiking certification, as well as education on responsible land stewardship.

They have also started a Cree immersion land-based school, kâ-nêyâsihk mîkiwâhpa Cree Academy of Excellence.

kâniyâsihk culture camps operate year-round.

We love sharing this because it’s our identity,” said Lewis.

There’s a reason our relatives lived into their nineties. With this land based movement, we’ve been trying to figure out it it has to do with our movement, our diet, our interacting with each other in a good, supportive way. Is laughter and ceremony a part of living a long, healthy life?”

Lewis said that contemporary society is fraught with obstacles that lead to people to become disconnected from their culture, the land, and their history. Their goal, at kâniyâsihk, is to re-ignite those fires.

Hide-tanning (photo: kâniyâsihk culture camps)

Not everyone knows how to pull out a fish and eat it, or cook a meal over a fire. That gap has gotten bigger. These experiences used to be a right of passage,” he said.

When you come here, we want you to put your cellphone away. When that happens, people become human again. The richness of us being human around the campfire, in a canoe, filleting a fish. That’s the magic of us being human and hanging out in the bush, in safe place – gathering memories and learning skills.”

The camps, naturally, are family-centred, with Lewis co-leading the organization alongside his sister, Darla Campbell, and their mother, Matilda Lewis.

Lewis said the camps therefore are designed to feel less like an instructor-student hierarchy, and more like a family learning together in the woods.

That kinship is so foundational in our governance, in our home fires, in understanding healing – both mental and physical,” said Lewis.

We’re always adopting people as well. I don’t have any biological brothers, but I’m always adopting people as my brothers.”

An approach like this has yielded countless returnees and longterm friendships built through the camp, said Lewis. He said he believes kâniyâsihk culture camps might be the longest running Indigenous culture camp in all of Canada.

Our biggest thing, for anyone who attends our camps, is to have conservation as their takeaway,” said Lewis.

To look after our home fires, but also the conservation of being us. To be safe being Anishinaabe, Dene, Michif, Cree, to be us. Having our own stories, our own jokes, our own humour. There’s not many places around that are like that.”