Permanent, domestic-rate stamps are required for regular-sized letters, postcards, and cards weighing up to 30 grams (about 5 sheets of paper).
Please note: these stamps are sent in sets of 6. Order one item for 6 stamps.
This stamp, part of the inaugural three-stamp Indigenous Leaders issue, pays tribute to Chief Marie-Anne Day Walker-Pelletier, who spent nearly 40 years as leader of the Okanese First Nation in Saskatchewan – the most consecutive terms ever served by an elected First Nations chief in Canada.
No other elected First Nations chief in Canada has served more consecutive terms than Chief Marie-Anne Day Walker-Pelletier (b. 1954, Regina, Saskatchewan). During her nearly 40 years as leader of the Okanese First Nation, on Treaty 4 territory near Fort Qu’Appelle, Saskatchewan, she forged her reputation as a matriarch and champion of her people. Day Walker-Pelletier fought to improve the quality of life of the Okanese and to protect the culture, rights and traditions of all First Nations people through her involvement in numerous tribal, provincial and national initiatives on social reform, health and wellness, and education. A survivor of the residential school system, she was particularly passionate about bettering the lives of women and children.
In 2021, a year after she retired, her decade-long dream to reintegrate Indigenous foster children into their families culminated in the opening of the Daywalker Home Fire Family Centre. On her appointment as a Member of the Order of Canada in 2018, Tribal Chief Edmund Bellegarde praised the positive impacts of her long-standing leadership: “She casts a big shadow and her voice is thundering; when she speaks, people listen.”