Sask. journalist wins Pulitzer Prize, Peabody for podcast about her father's residential school experience - Action News
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Sask. journalist wins Pulitzer Prize, Peabody for podcast about her father's residential school experience

A Saskatchewan First Nations woman's story about her father's residential school experience haswon the Pulitzer Prize and a Peabody Award in the span of 24 hours.

Connie Walker and team at Spotify's Gimlet Media win best audio journalism for Stolen: Surviving St. Michael's

A woman with glasses poses for a photo in front of some well-stocked bookshelves.
Journalist Connie Walker's podcast about her father's experience at a residential school in Duck Lake, Sask., has won the Pulitzer Prize for best audio journalism. (Submitted by Connie Walker)

A Saskatchewan First Nations woman's story about her father's residential school experience has won the Pulitzer Prize and a Peabody Award in the span of 24 hours.

Stolen: Surviving St. Michael's, a podcast by journalist Connie Walker and the team at Spotify'sGimlet Media,won the 2023Pulitzer Prize on Monday for best audio journalism. The following day, it won a Peabody Award for its "its tenacious reporting and continued commitment to recognizing the full history of the Indigenous community" in thepodcast and radio category.

"I feel like I'm still in shock. It's disbelief. It means so much. It's an incredible honour," Walker said Monday.

"I think of all of the people who bravely shared these stories with us. People should know these stories. More people will hear them now."

A Pulitzer Prize for audio has been awarded to the makers of the podcast, Stolen: Surviving St. Michael's, about a residential school in Saskatchewan.
Stolen: Surviving St. Michael's, about a residential school in Saskatchewan, has been awarded a 2023 Pulitzer Prize. (Supplied by Gimlet Media)

Walker is a former CBC journalist now working for New York-based Gimlet Media. She's a member of the Okanese First Nation in southern Saskatchewan.

The team working with Walker included former Saskatoon StarPhoenix reporter Betty Ann Adam, a member of the Fond du Lac Denesuline Nation in northern Saskatchewan.

Walker said it's important to recognize the history and stories of Indigenous communities, and that these stories are increasingly being told by Indigenous people themselves.

"Our stories do matter," she said.

LISTEN| CBC Radio's The Morning Edition speaks with Walker about the honour and what it says about the stories she has been telling her whole career:

Walker said she was inspired by the care Adam took with survivors, and by the determination of another Indigenous team member, ChantelleBellrichard, who unearthed thousands of pages ofdocuments for the project.

Walker, reached by phone in Seattle, said she's been on the phone all day with her team, siblings and other relatives.

"It's been non-stop," she said."Lots of happy tears."

Winners in other Pulitzer categories announced Monday included the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and the Associated Press.

LISTEN|Cree journalist Connie Walker wins Pulitzer and Peabody in same week:

Cree journalist Connie Walker won both a Pulitzer Prize and a Peabody Award for her podcast Stolen: Surviving St Michael's this week. Its a story of the residential school her father was forced to attend. She tells us about the importance of telling Indigenous stories.

The Peabody Awards, which honour stories told in broadcasting and digital media, will be handed out at a ceremony on June 11. Winners in other categories includedPBS, Apple TV+ and Disney+ and HBO Max.