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Manitoba

Indigenous boys need more support to prevent suicide, homicide: Manitoba children's advocate

The Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youth is demanding the province put more resources toward preventing any more deaths by suicide and homicide involving young Indigenous boys.

New report details how to help First Nations, Mtis, Inuit boys heal from trauma, colonization

Michael Breland and Trevor Merasty wrote a rap as part of a report by the Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youth, which looks at the high risk of suicide and homicide among Indigenous boys. 'We're basically holding our hand out to see if they're gonna take it to help bring us up,' Merasty says. (Sam Samson/CBC)

The Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youthis demanding the province focus more resources on Indigenous boys to preventmore deaths by suicide and homicide.

For a new report released Thursday morning called Finding the Way Back,staff with the advocate's office researchedand reviewed45 cases involving boys between 12 and 17 years old who died by suicide or homicide between 2009 and 2018.

Of the 45 boys whose cases were reviewed, 37 were Indigenous 35were First Nations and twowere Mtis. About half of the boys lived in the Northern Regional Health Authority and about a third lived in Winnipeg.

"Preventing suicide and homicide of boys in Manitoba requires an understanding of the early life experiences through a socio-ecological model" one thatfocuses on the connections between individuals, relationships, community and societal levels, the report says.

That includesunderstanding how colonization, intergenerational trauma and poverty affect youth, it says.

"Government and church processes stole our children from us," Ed Azure,one of five elders who reviewed the report before it was published, said at a news conference Thursday, where the report was officially released.

"We're still trying to overcome the residue of that time."

Azure, an elder fromNisichawayasihk Cree Nation, is also quoted in the report, saying "our trick is to find our way back to the Creator, to the source."

Intergenerational trauma, colonization playrole

The report looks atexperiences that were common among the 45 boys,including caregiver abuse, poverty, parents who had substance use disorders, gang involvement and poor school attendance.

It says 69 per cent of the boyswere in Child and Family Services care at one point, 76 per cent had "problematic substance use" and about half were hospitalized for a mental health concern.

"The ongoing oppressionthrough colonial structures continues to impact the health and well-being of Indigenous peoples," acting children's and youth advocate Ainsley Krone said duringThursday's news conference.

"This has resultedin complex and layered experiences of marginalizationand loss that contribute to an increased risk of harm for First Nations, Inuit and Mtis boys in Manitoba, including their risk of deathby suicide and homicide."

In the report, Krone makes fourrecommendations for provincial departments to address that risk:

  • Implementing evidence-based and culturally safe interventions for parents who use substances to reduce the number of Child and Family Services apprehensions.
  • Working on an Indigenous inclusion strategy in schools while also including culturally appropriate activities for Indigenous boys to try toclose the achievement gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous boys.
  • Urging the department of education to develop anti-racist education generally, and anti-Indigenous racism education specifically,for all members of the school systems.
  • Consulting communities to update and fund a provincial youth gang prevention strategy

The report also repeats a 2018 recommendation that calledon the Department of Health, along with front-line service providers and others, toimmediately addressthe lack of substance use treatments for young people and creating a youth addiction strategy.

More focus is needed on helping Indigenous boys, and specifically First Nations boys, succeed, the report says. It points tograduation gaps, not only between Indigenous boys and non-Indigenous boys, but between Indigenous boys and Indigenous girls as well.

"Despite the dire need for understanding these important and prevalent issues, focused examinations of the lived experiences of boys, particularly First Nations boys, are rare," the report says.

"Understanding the unique experiences of boys would allow public bodies to design programs and strategies that are better suited to addressing their unique needs and work towards preventing violent deaths."

Aspokesperson said the province has created a committee with different departments to review the report.

Social pressures

The report also details social pressures youngIndigenous boys face.

The advocate's officespoke with young men fromits Youth Ambassador Advisor Squad (YAAS), who said boys are told not to cry in Western society.

However,"it was noted that Indigenous teachings encourage boys to express themselves in these more honest ways," the report states.

"Suppressed emotions risk manifesting into externalized behaviours, resulting in teenage boys who may engage in self-harm and who, in turn, may use substances or engage in violence and criminal involvement as a way of expressing or releasing emotion."

As part of the report, two young First Nations men from YAAScreated a music video. Michael Brelandfrom Fox Lake Cree Nation and Trevor Merastyfrom Peter Ballantyne Cree Nation both wroteabout their experiences in Manitoba's Child and Family Services system.

"I don't know who I am,"Breland said in an interview with CBC Thursday.

"I never really found a solid answer because I've always been labelled throughoutCFS," he said.

"Butwith the music andthe report and all that reflectiveness and knowing that our lives aren't unique, we all struggle that's something that inspired me to help find myself."

The lyrics he and Merasty wrotedetail experiences with racism, as well astheir reactions tointergenerational trauma, including the discoveryof unmarked graves at several residential schools across Canada.

"But I don't understand how you could make me stand [for the Canadian anthem], when the bodies found are the evidence of Canada's original plan," raps Breland.

The lyrics also reference the toppling of statues at the Manitoba legislature grounds last July 1, at the end ofanEvery Child Matters walk, held toremember Indigenous children who died at residential schools.

"Now we gotta topple the queen so our people can see their dreams. Finally free at last, we can cast it into the past. Pass it to the future. The little ones, free at last."

Merasty hopes governmenttakes a good look at the report.

"I've got real high hopes," he said.

"We're basically holding our hand out to see if they're gonna take it to help bring us up. Because for so long, we were down. Now we're just trying to stand together so we can rise together."


If you're experiencing suicidal thoughts or having a mental health crisis, there is help out there. Contact the Manitoba Suicide Prevention and Support Line toll-free at 1-877-435-7170 (1-877-HELP170) or the Kids Help Phone at 1-800-668-6868. You can also text CONNECT to 686868 and get immediate support from a crisis responder through the Crisis Text Line, powered by Kids Help Phone.

Or contact Canada Suicide Prevention Service: 1-833-456-4566 (phone) | 45645 (text, 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. CT only) | crisisservicescanada.ca