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Welcome to Okanagan Metis Children and Family Services!
Written by Administrator   
May 11, 2007 at 12:00 AM

ImageThank you for visiting our site. We hope you find the information you are seeking within these pages, however knowing that we may have missed a detail or two, please feel free to let us know.

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Last Updated ( May 22, 2007 at 09:03 AM )
Who We Are As A People
Written by Administrator   
May 15, 2007 at 12:00 AM
We, the Métis, are a people of the lands which gave rise to our history, tradition and culture. We call these lands the Métis Homelands. These Homelands stretch from the lakes and rivers of Ontario, across the wide prairies, traversing the mountains into British Columbia and into the Northwest Territories. They include the hills and valleys of Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. These are our lands. They are Métis lands of our past, which nurture us today and which we value as the precious foundation of our future. As Métis who live in the Homelands, we hold it to be a fundamental truth that we are one of the Aboriginal peoples of the Americas. As Métis people we joined together long ago to form a new nation , a distinct nation , which Louis Riel called the “Métis Nation”. The Métis Nation continues today to be the embodiment of our past, our present, and our hopes and aspirations for the future.
Last Updated ( May 22, 2007 at 09:27 AM )
Where We Got Our Name
Written by Administrator   
May 15, 2007 at 12:00 AM
The paternal ancestors of the Métis were the former employees of the Hudson’s Bay and Northwest Fur Companies, and their maternal ancestors were Indian women of various tribes. The French word, “Métis” is derived from the Latin participle mixtus, which means “mixed”; in French “mele”; it expresses well the idea that is sought to be conveyed. However appropriate the corresponding English expression “Halfbreed” might have been for the first generation of the mixture of blood, now that European blood and Indian blood are mixed in every degree, it is no longer general enough. The French word “Mét” expresses the idea of this mixture in the most satisfactory manner possible, and thus becomes a proper race name. Why should we care to what degree exactly of mixture we possess European blood and Indian blood? If we feel ever so little gratitude and filial love toward one or the other, do they not constrain us to say: “We are Métis!” – Statement by Louis Riel
Last Updated ( May 22, 2007 at 09:21 AM )
Need information on Métis Citizenship?
Come out to meet the Métis Nation BC Registry Clerk, Wendy Chernivchan on 26 Feburary between 9am - 4pm at the Kelowna Métis Association office. You can call Wendy to set an appointment at 250-320-7055.

The Kelowna Métis Association is open Tuesdays from 9am - 4pm at #202-2949 Pandosy Street.
You can call their office at 250-860-0690 or find them on the web at www.kma.okmcfs.com

If you are in the South end of the Okanagan Valley, contact the Metis Heritage and Cultural Council President, Dan Pitman at 250-492-0759 or write to

For Vernon and the North Okanagan, contact the Vernon District Métis Association President, Marlene Beattie at 250-542-9037 or email

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