First Nations reach across Canada-U.S. border to share vaccines, leaving some ‘giddy and crying.'

Story by @OmarMosleh and @alex_mckeen
thestar.com/news/canada/20…
As Alberta goes through sky-rocketing COVID-19 numbers, Montana's Blackfeet Nation used its proximity to the Canada-U.S. border to share extra vaccines with Canadians who needed doses. thestar.com/news/canada/20…
Calgary's Gayla Woolf Holt and her husband drove down the highway to the border to get their vaccines. "We were in awe that we were given this opportunity,” Woolf Holt said. “It’s like: Wow. We have been so blessed.”

thestar.com/news/canada/20…
This is an example of something expected to happen on a larger scale as the U.S. will soon likely share with neighbours. But, due in part to the close connections between First Nations across the border, they were able to share vaccines more quickly.

thestar.com/news/canada/20…
The Siksikaitsitapi Blackfoot Confederacy Tribal Council worked with Health Canada, Canada Border Service Agency, provincial and state officials and leaders from Alberta Blackfoot First Nations to set up the mobile clinic.

thestar.com/news/canada/20…
More than 450 Canadians went through a two-day drive-thru clinic hosted by the Blackfeet. They included members of the local Siksika nation, which is related to the Blackfeet Nation south of the border, and residents of the Cardston area.

thestar.com/news/canada/20…

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