Rapper and actor Ice Cube has collected a few blessings from Indigenous people in Canada in his travels and he got another one this week at a stop on his “Straight into Canada” tour. Eleesha Papin from Enoch Cree Nation near Edmonton presented him with a Starblanket on behalf of her community during his show at their River Cree Resort Casino.
“Our people are about love and about nurturing, and about acceptance and welcoming … we need to see that more,” said Papin.
The king size blanket detailed with the Raiders logo and west side hand sign was made by local artist Kayla Morgan and her mother Judy Cardinal. Papin remembers jamming out with her family to Ice Cube’s music and watching his movies at home. Since then, her dad and brother died and she says Ice Cube’s music helped her along her healing journey. She’s marking four years of sobriety in May and said the rapper is a role model for her.
“Our people and his people went through the same thing and we are breaking cycles,” she said.
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This week’s event at River Cree Resort Casino was part of Ice Cube’s second round of concerts in Canada this year. Several shows were at First Nations-owned venues.
“The fact that the casino is owned by First Nations is great,” Ice Cube told CBC Indigenous. “Some form, piece of the pie, is going where it needs to go.”
In February, Tahltan beader Carmen Dennis threw a medallion she made of the rapper onto the stage at a concert in Abbotsford, B.C., and this week, he was gifted the Starblanket.
“I’m always blown away that people would spend that much time and talent to do something specifically for me,” he said.
He said he thinks his music resonates with Indigenous people because it’s authentic. “I speak truth to power. I lay it on the line,” he said. “It’s not just all for my benefit. Hopefully it’s medicine for the hearts of a lot of people who feel the same way.”
Rapper Ice Cube wears Tahltan beader’s artwork on stage
The Tahltan artist, who lives in the community of Dease Lake, in B.C.’s far northwest, had spent two days driving more than 1,600 kilometres to see the rapper Ice Cube perform in Abbotsford, about 64 kilometres southeast of Vancouver. To celebrate the occasion, she had created a medallion bearing the Straight Outta Compton rapper’s image, using beading techniques she learned from an elder.
She wore it to the show, which sparked conversations with some fellow fans. But as the rapper tore through his hits, Dennis’ niece and daughter, who were also at the concert, convinced her to take the medallion off and let them throw it on stage in the hopes of getting his attention.