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Saskatoon

Zoey Roy's homecoming: finding a safe place after homelessness

Zoey Roy has taken her life experiences and written about her path from homelessness to security in a new poetry memoir called homecoming.

Mtis poet, hip-hop artist and activist releases poetry memoir of her life

Zoey Roy, Saskatoon artist and activist, has released a poetry memoir called "homecoming". (CBC)

Zoey Roy, a youngMtisartist and activist in her 20s,has lived in many places. She has her own place in Saskatoon right now.But sometimes homewas theentrance of a bank or under a city bridge. Sometimes it was a room at Kilburn Hall.

Roy has taken her life experiences and written about her path from homelessness to finding safety and identityin a new poetry memoir called homecoming.

"My dad was in the military and so he raised us in different military bases across Canada and he just liked to travel," Roy said. "And my mom raised us all over Saskatchewan. I grew up between parents. So I lived [in] a lot of places."

I had a really good childhood, rich with culture and a lot of diversity. I did experience adversity, of course, just like a lot of aboriginal youth.- Zoey Roy

The memoir documents how she left home when she was barely a teenagerand spent time on the streets. It details how she spent time in the justice system andalsoreferencessome experiencesofsexual abuse.

"I had a really good childhood, rich with culture and a lot of diversity. I did experience adversity, of course, just like a lot of aboriginal youth," she said.

Leaving home at 13

She left home when she was 13,"and a lot of that was out of stubbornness. I didn't really feel like I had a place to belong and so I searched and searched for a place to belong, searched for identity."

Roy said she didn't know where she fit in, and that brought chaos into her teenage life. While she was on the streets she was incarcerated28 times over 16 months.

"I think what I really needed was a shoulder, someone to love me, and jail wasn't the place for me. So I started advocating for restorative justice after I turned 15 and I realized that the system was built to facilitate a lot of aboriginal people's failures."

Poet Zoey Roy has released a memoir of her life. She shares how she has found home, despite time on the streets and incarcerated. (CBC)

She said she was up against a felony and would have had a mandatory sentence if she committed another crime.

"I had to make a choice. I knew that I didn't want to be in the system. I didn't want to be another statistic. So I had to either continue on that path which I knew I didn't want it didn't make me happy, or I can suck it up, get a job and go to school."

So she started getting involved in helping other people. Roy said she volunteeredthousands of hours, she worked low paying jobs. She also returned to writing and expressing herself through art.

"I wrote poetry as a healing mechanism and I found that it really worked."

Here is an excerpt from her memoir:

Home becomes where my heart is safe,

where our bodies are safe

I have found safety within the confines of my body

My body has become my temple.

A nomadic temple.

Roy is involved in many projects and currently wantsto teach children. She is enrolled in an indigenouseducation programat the U of S.

You can hear Zoey Roy in conversation with Saskatoon Morning host LeishaGrebinskitomorrow morningat 8:10 a.m. on 94.1 FM.