Remember that grainy, viral online video last summer of the Saskatoon Ukrainian dance troupe performing an Indigenous powwow routine?

It sparked a heated, at times vicious debate on cultural appropriation.

Ukrainian dance performance at Saskatoon Folkfest0:54

The issue is coming up across the country with increasing frequency, from headdress Halloween costumes to writer Joseph Boyden’s ancestry.

Full Kaleidoscope performance by Pavlychenko Folklorique Ensemble7:32

But quietly, across the country, many others are quietly grappling with that same issue — in their music, at work and even within their own families.

Here are four of their stories — a Ukrainian dancer, a Métis teacher, a First Nations powwow singer and the self-described “middle-aged white man” working to diversify the University of Saskatchewan’s art galleries.

‘We tried to approach it with respect’

Aubree

Ukrainian dancer Aubree Worobetz (Jason Warick/CBC)

Ukrainian dancer Aubree Worobetz cried for most of the drive home.

She’d pulled over to take a call. A friend told her to look at Facebook.

“It was out of control,” the Saskatoon woman recalled.

Worobetz and her fellow Pavlychenko Folklorique Ensemble had performed the multicultural dance called Kaleidoscope dozens of times in Saskatoon and around the world.

They’d practiced three times a week for two hours each. Now, they were being accused of appropriating and stealing First Nations culture.

Some criticisms included the lack of Treaty Six or Métis flags in their tapestry, the inauthentic costumes or their inadequate consultation with elders and experts.

Worobetz didn’t go to work for three days, trying to make sense of what was happening.

“We were trying to embody our appreciation of other cultures. We tried to approach it with respect,” she said.

Kaleidoscope has been put on hold. Worobetz is hoping everyone can discuss their differences before posting on social media.

She’s hoping to learn more about First Nations dance. And she’s hoping there’s a way to honour Indigenous culture that everyone can appreciate.

“Do we just take it off the table? I’d hate to see it lost,” she said.

“It’s a time to listen and learn.”

‘Let’s build bridges, not burn them’

John Noon

World champion powwow singer John Noon (Victoria Dinh/CBC)