Manitoba teacher hopes goose hunting will help save his students - Action News
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Manitoba teacher hopes goose hunting will help save his students

Kerry Muswagon is the cultural awareness teacher at Mikisew school in Cross Lake, Man., where six young people committed suicide in a three-month period. He believes if he teaches the students about their culture, theyll feel better about themselves. Thats where the goose hunt comes in.

Six young people in Cross Lake committed suicide in three months

Hunting geese to help the youth in Cross Lake

8 years ago
Duration 13:31
Every spring Kerry Muswagon takes his grade 8 class to hunt geese. His hope is that these trips will help prevent suicides in the Cross Lake, Manitoba.

KerryMuswagon is the cultural awareness teacher at Mikisew school in Cross Lake, Man., where six young people committed suicidein athree-month period. Thecommunity, also known asPimicikamakCreeNation and located about 500 km north of Winnipeg,declared a state of emergency in March and had 100 kids on suicide watch.

Muswagon believes if he teaches the studentsabout their culture, they'll feel better about themselves. That's where the goose hunt comes in.

(Nick Purdon/CBC)

'I don't really like to stay inside. It gets lonely.'

This is Justin, one of Muswagon's 14-year-old hunters. "Out here it feels wide openand free," he said ofthe outdoors program.When the trip is over, the teen willbring a goosehome to his motherfor dinner. "She is going to get all nerdy and embarrassing. Like,'Ohhh, I'm so proud of you,'" he said.

(Nick Purdon/CBC)

Every spring, KerryMuswagontakes his Grade 8 students into the bush to hunt geese.

"When people ask me,'How many kids do you have?' I say, '400,'" Muswagon said. "I treat them all like my sons and daughters." That's him calling geese to a blind built by his students on Day 1 of the three-day course.

(Leonardo Palleja/CBC)

Muswagonwas worried about teaching hisstudents to use guns.

Giving guns to young people in the midst of a crisis like the one facing Cross Lake causedMuswagonto question his methods. Butwhen helistened to hisheart,he came to the realization that the outdoors iswhere his students belong. "It's part of our tradition.If we don't teach them, who is going to?Maybe this will help them cope," he said.

(Leonardo Palleja/CBC)

Hunting helps Tyrell forget

Tyrell, 13, is in Muswagon's program andknows three people who committed suicide in Cross Lake. He said the goose hunthelps him forget. "It just kind of helps me accept that they're gone so I don't have to keep missing them."

(Leonardo Palleja/CBC)

'It's kind of boring in town.'

Huntingisn't just for boys. Here,Angel and Hannah, both 14, learn to pluckgeese shot during the three-day camping program. Hannah said she likes it out on the land"because there's nothing to do [in town] and nowhere to go."

(Leonardo Palleja/CBC)

Spring came early to Cross Lake.

Most of the snow melted while Muswagon'seighthgraderswere at the camp, leaving their snowmobiles looking a little out of place in fields of damp grass.

(Nick Purdon/CBC)

They teach the kids to hunt beaver, too.

This is Cross Lake elder Edwin Muswagon, 67, skinninga beaver that one of the students shot. He, like Ronnie McKay, pictured below, want to pass their knowledge on to the next generation.

(Nick Purdon/CBC)
(Nick Purdon/CBC)

Muswagon spent a lot of time in the bush with his dad.

"It sure helped me," the teachersaid of his time hunting with his father. "I didn't have time to think about the problems in the community." Now he hopes to pay that experience forward.Below, studentsKenneth andTyrrellscanthe sky for signs ofbirds.

(Nick Purdon/CBC)

After gutting their geese, Muswagon and Tyrell wash them in the lake.

Tyrell was in Muswagon's class when he got the news about one of the suicides. "He was crying and he gave me a hug. It was pretty emotional," Muswagon recalled."We wanted him to come out and take a break from Cross Lake and be with Mother Nature."

(Leonardo Palleja/CBC)