Edmonton Journal

Fight for equality is not over, scholarshi­p winner says

Cree student a survivor of on-campus sexual assault in her university dorm

- STEPHANIE MARIN With files from Jim Bronskill in Ottawa The Canadian Press

An Indigenous engineerin­g student is this year's recipient of the Order of the White Rose from Polytechni­que Montreal in memory of the victims and survivors of the 1989 anti-feminist attack on the school.

Brielle Chanae Thorsen, 22, says the lives of the 14 women cut short by the massacre at what was then known as Ecole polytechni­que must never be forgotten, but real work remains in achieving full equality.

“We all need to remember the women who came before us, especially the victims and survivors of the Polytechni­que tragedy,” Thorsen, a Cree woman, said in an interview.

“We must all have an equal opportunit­y to pursue a rewarding career without being the targets of discrimina­tion or violence, regardless of our gender, race, sexuality, or religion.”

That wasn't the case for the 14 women — mostly students — gunned down. Thirteen others — nine women and four men — were injured by Marc Lepine during a 20-minute shooting rampage at the Montreal engineerin­g school on Dec. 6, 1989.

At a virtual ceremony held Thursday to announce the scholarshi­p, Thorsen revealed that she had been the victim of a sexual assault in her dorm two days before beginning university.

“This award has special significan­ce to me, because I am a survivor of on-campus violence,” she said.

She added that the assault made her university experience a struggle.

“I learned the hard way that we don't all have an equal opportunit­y to succeed in university,” she said. “How can you be a perfect student when you're undergoing a significan­t life-altering event?”

On the same day her award was announced, members of the House of Commons observed a minute of silence to honour the lost lives ahead of the 31st anniversar­y of the killings on Sunday.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said it is our duty to never forget the misogynist­ic, anti-feminist nature of the attack that struck at the very heart of society's values.

In May, the government outlawed some 1,500 types of assault-style firearms, including the Ruger Mini-14 used by the killer in Montreal.

And Trudeau said the government would be introducin­g legislatio­n to follow through on his government's commitment to protect against gun violence.

“Canadians know that there is no place in our country for weapons designed to kill the largest number of people in the shortest amount of time. They know that these weapons were not designed to hunt deer,” he said in reference to the banned assault-style firearms.

Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'toole did not mention gun control but called for a recommitme­nt to ending violence toward women and vulnerable people.

“And in a pandemic, when worry and mental health is touching every corner of our country and every family within the Canadian family, let's make sure that no one is isolated, no one is forgotten, and that there is a zero tolerance towards violence in our society,” he said.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh noted that Indigenous women and girls are more likely to face violence and more likely to be killed.

He said action on calls for justice from the national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women has been “too slow in coming.”

Thorsen, a member of the Saddle Lake Cree Nation in central Alberta, intends to pursue a master's degree in mechanical engineerin­g at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., where she obtained her bachelor's degree in mechanical engineerin­g and mathematic­s.

Although she was born after the tragic events of 1989, Thorsen is well aware of what happened that day. And she knows that this $30,000 scholarshi­p, awarded to a Canadian female engineerin­g student looking to pursue graduate studies in the field, carries a special weight and significan­ce.

Rememberin­g the victims and survivors is important, because “their efforts and their lives have enabled me and my classmates to study safely,” she added

But more than 30 years later, barriers remain, Thorsen said.

Women remain a minority in engineerin­g classes, although combined between engineerin­g and mathematic­s, they account for 50 per cent of students.

“Engineers are designing solutions for the world. So why would we only have a small fraction of

this population designing solutions for everyone?”

Thorsen intends to specialize in sustainabl­e energy by using her knowledge to work with Indigenous communitie­s in the North on projects aimed at energy sovereignt­y.

We all need to remember the women who came before us, especially the victims and survivors of the Polytechni­que tragedy.

 ?? STEPH CROSIER ?? Brielle Chanae Thorsen, 22, says women on university campuses still do not have an equal opportunit­y to succeed.
STEPH CROSIER Brielle Chanae Thorsen, 22, says women on university campuses still do not have an equal opportunit­y to succeed.

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