On the eve of the summer solstice, a day of significance for First Nations, Métis, and Inuit people, the Royal Canadian Mint honoured their rich heritage with a two dollar commemorative circulation coin celebrating National Indigenous Peoples Day.
For the first time on a Canadian circulation coin, three different artists have collaborated on a single design to fuse their personal visions and respective cultures.
The artwork appearing on the new coin is the creation of Megan Currie, English River First Nation, Myrna Pokiak (Agnaviak), Inuvialuit Settlement Region and Jennine Krauchi, Red River Métis.
There is a limited mintage of three million coins, of which two million will be coloured, and will begin circulation Wednesday, to correspond with National Indigenous Peoples Day.
The coloured and uncoloured circulation coin are also available as collectibles in a six-piece coin set. Other collector products adding to the celebration of National Indigenous Peoples Day include:
- Special wrap rolls of 25 two-dollar circulation coins, in coloured and uncoloured versions;
- a special wrap roll set featuring a coloured and uncoloured coin roll; and
- a 1 oz. fine silver version of the circulation coin design.
Can’t wait to honour indigenous people with a coins most people don’t use anymore just to steal more of their land for construction projects!
Maybe most people you know, but there is still a lot of cash being used every day.
No. Most people.
https://payments.ca/sites/default/files/PaymentsCanada_Canadian_Payment_Methods_and_Trends_Report_2022_En_0.pdf
Was it really there land to begin with?
I believe technically it wasn’t. I remember reading as a kid that they chased out other aboriginal tribes from this territory that had to move south.