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HomeEducation / CulturePapal visit a wake up call for Canadians

Papal visit a wake up call for Canadians

By Michael Swan

TORONTO, Canada (The Catholic Register) – For six days in July the most important thing happening in this country will be an old man confronting our history.

Pope Francis will be in Canada July 24 to 29 on a pilgrimage of healing and reconciliation, visiting Edmonton, Iqaluit and Quebec City. That the 85-year-old Pope will be limited by his age and his health is hardly a surprise, but it is also an advantage – an aspect of Pope Francis’ spiritual power to heal. For Indigenous Canadians, out of the many different parts of Pope Francis’ identity, none matters more than his status as an elder.

“In our minds and in our world view, as you age you become more valuable to the community,” explained Deacon Harry Lafond, Indigenous education scholar at St. Thomas More College in Saskatoon and former Chief of the Muskeg Cree First Nation. “Simply because your age tends to help you to understand life from a different perspective. You bring that to the generations that are following you. And people depend on that. They depend on these elders to provide that spiritual leadership, that road to wisdom about life and living.”

Edmonton Archbishop Richard Smith, chosen to co-ordinate the papal visit on behalf of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, made it very clear that Pope Francis’ pilgrimage to Canada will be the completion of something begun in Rome March 28 to April 1, when he issued an historic apology.

“He met with them (Indigenous Canadians) in Rome so that he could listen to them, listen to their stories, encounter them – hear their hearts and express his own,” Smith told a press conference May 13. “It gave him an opportunity to learn about the historical realities and the historical and ongoing trauma that does continue to impact Indigenous peoples.”

The limitations imposed by the Pope’s advanced age are not limitations in the spiritual or historical scope of the papal visit, said Smith.

“Because the Pope can’t get to every site doesn’t mean he still can’t address every issue,” he said.

Former New Brunswick Lieutenant Governor Graydon Nicholas really hopes non-Indigenous Canadians are paying attention. Nicholas has full confidence that Pope Francis will fulfil the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Call to Action #58 and issue an apology on Indigenous land.

“However, I think the significance of the trip is also for all of Canada – to remind Canadians, the government and all the different faiths who were involved in residential schools, that it was wrong,” Nicholas said.

If we really are “Walking Together,” as the official theme for the papal visit proclaims, then non-Indigenous Canadians have to be along for more than just the ride, “at least for those who are Christians, who believe in reconciliation as a sacrament and as a path toward healing and forgiveness.”

Rather than waiting for Indigenous people to show the way to reconciliation, the rest of the country must step up, said Nicholas, a long-time member of the Guadalupe Circle that brings together Indigenous elders and Catholic bishops.

“Personally, I believe it’s a walk together,” he said. “Indigenous people are not the ones who did the wrong.”

The Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami greeted news of the Pope’s visit in the spirit of a continuing journey.

Read the full story here.

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