Ottawa Citizen

Studies show keeping newborns with their incarcerat­ed mothers is the best thing for the babies’ health.

Connection strong even behind bars, write Marc and Craig Kielburger.

- Craig and Marc Kielburger are the co-founders of the WE movement, which includes WE Charity, ME to WE Social Enterprise and WE Day. For more dispatches from WE, check out WE Stories.

Amid the constant crackle of radios and chatter of inmates, surprising sounds linger in the prison halls.

A baby’s coo. A mother’s gentle soothing. The creak of a rocking chair, rhymes recited from a children’s book, scratches of a crayon.

Behind the barbed-wire fence at Alouette Correction­al Centre for Women, 50 kilometres east of Vancouver, is a state-of-theart nursery. It’s one of the only mother-child units in a Canadian prison system that leaves many children without mothers.

In fact, Alouette is the only mother-child unit in a provincial-level institutio­n, where 6,000 women serve time in 18 facilities across the country (there are others in federal prisons, but the vast majority of women are sentenced provincial­ly). Experts estimate 20,000 Canadian children are separated from their mothers because of incarcerat­ion every year.

“We judge these women. We say, you’re a bad woman, you must be a bad mother, so we punish the child as well,” says Dr. Ruth Elwood Martin, director of the Collaborat­ing Centre for Prison Health and Education at the University of British Columbia and a former prison physician.

Children behind bars may sound like fodder for a juicy story or a bad comedy. But over 90 countries around the world — including Canada, the United Kingdom and Germany — have laws allowing prison childcare in some form. Eligible women undergo rigorous screening to ensure their children aren’t at risk, and the programs have proven benefits.

At Alouette, inmate mothers raise their children under supervisio­n, receive parenting and first aid classes and babysittin­g support. At age four, children transition to living there part time as they begin school.

Medical studies show keeping newborns with their incarcerat­ed mothers is the best thing for the babies’ health. Time together leads to improved social and emotional growth, limits anxiety and depression, and boosts immune-system developmen­t.

It’s also good for the mother’s well-being and rehabilita­tion. Time with their children is incentive for women to turn their lives around and leads to lower recidivism rates.

Bonding time can also heal societal trauma and familial wounds, says Martin, but for most inmate mothers without access to facilities, that opportunit­y is lost. Critics say prisons are the new residentia­l schools, contributi­ng to the breakup of indigenous families as the number of indigenous women in Canadian prisons has grown more than 100 per cent since 2001.

Healing family ties is a major part of reconcilia­tion, and prisons offer a unique opportunit­y to address some of the residual trauma by supporting family bonds. “We’re dealing with tragically high numbers of indigenous women, many who experience­d trauma or substance abuse themselves,” Martin says. “We have an opportunit­y to break that cycle.”

For two decades, Martin has been advocating for mothers and babies behind bars, calling for mother-child units in all Canadian correction­al facilities.

Ahead of Mother’s Day, we’re echoing her call. Our prison system is meant for rehabilita­tion, not punishing vulnerable families.

The damaging effects of separation can be permanent, Martin says. “Once you take a baby away from its mother, there’s no going back.”

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