
Check out our Facebook event for more information, or contact Kimberly Bressette, Youth Coordinator at kimberly_desiree@hotmail.c


We are very excited to announce that our first Taking Action! workshop will be held in Toronto, Ontario from Friday October 17 until Sunday October 19.
Join us each day for some art, hip-hop, story-telling, and cultural pride to help stop the spread of HIV in our Aboriginal communities.
E-mail Jessica Yee, National Youth Coordinator at takingaction4youth@gmail.com for registration forms or more information.
Invite your friends! Right-click and save the poster to pass on to your networks!
Details for Toronto workshop:
Meals and TTC tickets will be provided.
Venue is wheelchair accessible.
When: Friday October 17 until Sunday October 19
Friday dinner begins at 5:30pm
Saturday and Sunday 10am to 6pm
Sunday public exhibition of art from 3pm to 5pm
Where: Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE)
252 Bloor St. W (at St. George subway), 4th floor
Artists:
Waawaate Fobister (Anishinaabe), theatre
Jennifer Yee (Mohawk), visual artist
Ali Lakhani, hip-hop artist
Keep checking back regularly for updates on your favourite Aboriginal artists who will be performing, prizes to be given away, and way more fun stuff!
Older than 18? Don't hesitate to contact us if you want to volunteer or help out!



Ashley Heaslip is a graduate student in public health sciences at the University of Toronto. She is originally from the wild West Coast of British Columbia and is happiest kayaking or when her head is buried deep in a tidal pool. Ashley has made a few documentaries with youth on the topic of sexual health and recently spent part of the summer making a documentary on a community garden project. She is a big fan of indy rock, injera, and walking bare foot in wet grass.
Tracey Prentice is a qualitative community-based researcher with a commitment to social justice. For more than 5 years she has worked with the Canadian Aboriginal AIDS Network and its partners to better understand the drivers and the impacts of HIV/AIDS on Canadian Aboriginal communities, particularly for youth and women. Tracey has an MA in Anthropology and is currently completing her PhD in Population Health at the University of Ottawa. For fun, Tracey likes to travel, keep fit and explore the world under water (scuba dive).

Jean-Paul Restoule is Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) and French-Canadian and a member of the Dokis First Nation. He is Assistant Professor of Aboriginal Education at OISE/UT and father of two children. He likes biking the Don Trail with his toddler and listening to Built to Spill.