Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Manitoba

RWB's Going Home Star brings back haunted memories

Some survivors of Canada's residential schools were haunted by memories as they watched their story told in dance on a stage in Winnipeg.

RWB debuts Going Home Star Truth and Reconciliation

10 years ago
Duration 1:31
Going Home Star Truth and Reconciliation is the Royal Winnipeg Ballet's story about a dark chapter of Canadian history.

Some survivors of Canada's residential schools were haunted by memories as they watched their storytold in dance on a stage in Winnipeg.

The new work by the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, called Going Home Star Truth and Reconciliation,is astory about a dark chapter of Canadian history decades of abuse and attempted indoctrination of thousands of First Nations children.

That feeling is still there. My wife had to hold my hand in the dark.- TedFontaine

More than 150,000 aboriginal children went through the residential school system, many suffering physical or sexual abuse.

Ted Fontaine, one of those survivors,watched the debut performance Wednesday night at Winnipeg's Centennial Concert Hall.

He said it was moving, but also haunting as it stirreddeep memories.

"When I saw the priests come outand, that feeling is still there. It shouldn't be. I should be able to handle that feeling well," he said.

"That feeling is still there. My wife had to hold my hand in the dark."

But Fontaine saidthe ballet is one of many ways for the story of the residential schools to be told and for its survivors to heal.

"I actually had a lump. I don't understand this medium very well [but]it hit me. I knew what was going on," he said.

Author Joseph Boyden, who wrote the story for the performance,knows it comes with pain.

"And when I say pain, I am talking about children torn from their families and then spit out into the system after they are done," he said.