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Saskatchewan

Cowessess First Nation to begin construction on transition home for girls in social services' care

Cowessess First Nation hopes to have girls' home ready on August 1, 2019.

Home will help 10 girls between ages 14-17

A child leans his forehead and forearm against a wall.
More than 100 children and youth from Cowessess First Nation are in care. (Costea Andrea M/Shutterstock)

Cowessess First Nation has begun construction on a new transition home for young girls in long term care with social services.

The Cowessess First Nation has about 4,000 band membersand more than100 youth in care.

"One of the most challenging people to be in this country is an Aboriginal," Cowessess Chief Cadmus Delorme told CBC Saskatchewan's Afternoon Editionon Wednesday.

Delorme said his community wants to support some of these children and help them understand who they are and where they come from.

"And to be a very proud Cowessess citizen," he said.

The home is intended fortengirlsbetween the ages of 14 and17. It will focus on girls who are in long-term care with the Ministry of Social Services or First Nations' child welfare agencies.

On Thursday,Cowessess will break ground on the project with a sod turning ceremony.Basement construction will begin on May 13. The purchased home is scheduled to be moved onto the site in June and girls will begin moving in on August 1, 2019.

Watching a child meet hiscousin or his auntie for the first time ... it's very emotional.- Chief Cadmus Delorme

Cowessess First Nation has also created a 'Big Brother, Big Sister' position, as part of the project.

"Her mandate is to identify the children, contact them, to get better relationships with the children, with the foster families," Delormesaid. "We can keep it simple and make our errors small and our successes big."

Cowessess First Nation decided to create a home specifically for girls after conducting research, including looking into Indian Child Family Services'files, Delorme said.

Chief Cadmus Delorme says the First Nation wants to build relationships with those youth who are in care and their foster families. (Rob Kruk/CBC)

"It really pulls at your heartstrings, some of these stories that these youth have," Delorme said. "And even some that are aged out and are adults and they tell you the story of what they went through."

"Watching a child meet his cousin or his auntie for the first time ... it's very emotional, especially when you are very family-orientated," he said.

His goal for Cowessess children is for all of them tobe completely out of care within 10 years. Instead, Cowessess prefers that children from thecommunity, who need help, live with relatives or are adopted by another family in the community.

Delorme and his wife have raised two children who are nottheir biological kin but who have become family.

To play a more direct role in our youth, is a better future for everybody, Indigenous or not.- Cowessess Chief Cadmus Delorme

"In our kinship ways as Indigenous people, sometimes you get adopted into families as auntie and uncle but to be raised in a home that is education-focused, is culturally appropriate that's the whole goal," he said.

Because of his personal experience, Delormesaid he wants to help build stronger relationships between youth and community members.

"To play a more direct role withour youth, is a better future for everybody, Indigenous or not," Delorme said.

"We all have to take part in this role of making a better today and tomorrow for the first people for our new Canadians and for Canadians at large."

In the end, hishope is to give every child equal opportunity.

"We want to make every one of our children walk with their chin up, their head high and to be very proud," he said. "This is just the beginning."

The Cowessess First Nation is located 137 kilometres east of Regina.

With files from CBC Radio's The Afternoon Edition