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Mi’Kmaq sign will welcome motorists to Cape Breton

The Canso Causeway will sport a new Mi’kmaq sign this week.

At a ceremony on Friday, July 9, Premier Iain Rankin, Mi’kmaq elders and chiefs Port Hawkesbury Mayor, Brenda Chisholm- Beaton and guests unveiled a prototype sign.

It reads Pjila’si Unama’kik.

“The installation of this sign on the causeway shows how we are working together towards reconciliation,” says Chief Leroy Denny, chairperson, Mi’kmaw Kina’matnewey. “The Mi’kmaw language is vital to our existence. It is the foundation to understanding who we are. Using the original place names gives all Nova Scotians and visitors a better understanding of the landscape here in Mi’kma’ki. Unama’ki is the land of the fog.”

The Mi’kmaq language is verb-based, and doesn’t translate does not translate directly into English.

The sign loosely translates to, Welcome:come in and sit down (Pjila’si), land of fog Unama’kik — the Mi’kmaq word used to describe Cape Breton.

The sign will be installed on the far east entrance to the island this week.

  • Kelly MacMillan lives in Port Hawkesbury with her husband and son. She has been part of the team at 101.5 The Hawk for more than 25 years, sharing stories from around the region. You can join her weekdays from 10am until 2pm.

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