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Manitoba

Winnipeg park renamed in honour of Elder Ted Fontaine, who attended nearby residential school

Loved ones, community members and a city councillor gathered at a Wellington Crescent park on Wednesday morning to officially unveil its new name, in honour of late Anishinabe elder and residential school survivor Theodore Fontaine.

Wellington Cresc. park was a place where Assiniboia students 'reclaimed their identity,' says Fontaine's wife

A woman reaches out to touch a white sign with green lettering reading
Theodore Fontaine's wife, Morgan Fontaine, brushes snow off the newly unveiled park sign that honours her late husband, Theodore (Ted) Fontaine, on Wednesday. (CTV pool camera)

A Winnipeg park has been renamed inhonour of an elder and former Sagkeeng First Nation chief who died last year, and dedicated much of his life to telling others about his experience at a nearby residential school.

At an unveiling ceremony Wednesday, Wellington Park was officially renamedTheodore Niizhotay Fontaine Park.

When he was seven years old, Theodore (Ted)Fontaine who died in May 2021 at age 79was forced to attend the Fort Alexander residential school,located in what is now Sagkeeng First Nation, his home community.

He later attended the Assiniboiaresidential school in Winnipeg, which was located next to the park now named after him.

"This land was very special to him,"Fontaine's wife, Morgan Fontaine, said after Wednesday's unveiling ceremony.

"It symbolized a place where he and the other students could come out and not be supervised and dominated and observed."

She and River Heights-Fort GarryCoun. John Orlikowunveiled the sign bearing the park's new name at a Wednesday morning ceremony, which began witha drum song and prayer.

The City of Winnipeg approved the name change for the park in May of this year, as part of council's effort to rename parks and trails to better reflect Indigenous history.

Ted Fontaine "worked tirelessly to share his healing journey with others," Orlikow said in a news release announcing the name change.

Fontaineoften shared hisexperiences at the school, including writing a memoir calledBroken Circle: The Dark Legacy of Indian Residential Schoolsnot just to heal himself, he wrote, but also others who suffered like him.

He alsobecame a highly respected chief ofSagkeengFirst Nation, in eastern Manitoba, and was also anelderand a traditional knowledge keeper forhis home community.

A woman with long grey hair, wearing a black jacket, stands in a snow-covered park.
Morgan Fontaine says her late husband found comfort and a taste of freedom at Wellington Park when he attended the nearby Assiniboia residential school. The park was officially renamed in his honour at a ceremony on Wednesday morning. (CTV pool camera)

He spent his final years in Winnipeg, living in the River Heights neighbourhood. Morgan Fontaine says he would visit the Wellington Crescent park throughout the week.

"We would be driving up Wellington Crescent and he would say, 'Do you mind if we stop?'" she recalled.

They would pull in, park the car, and often sit in silence as they looked over the land.

The park was the first place Tedand his classmates felt a bit of freedom, Morgan said.

"For all the years, from [age] seven to his arrival here, he had no freedom at all. And this was a space where they reclaimed their identity, where they could speak their language, where they could be themselves," she said.

Out of his class of 99 students at the Assiniboiaschool, two-thirds died in early adulthood as a result of their trauma from their school experience, Morgan said. Her husband remembered every one of them by name.

"On an every daybasis, this will be a place that families and children can come and be themselves, and play, and laugh. And the spirits of those who are so treasured here will be uplifted by that. This is really a legacy for all of them."

A white sign with green lettering reads
For Assiniboia residential school students like her husband, the park was 'a space where they reclaimed their identity, where they could speak their language, where they could be themselves,' said Morgan Fontaine. (CBC)