Toronto Star

Call for inquest into girl’s suicide

Mom of Sheridan Hookimaw says inquiry could save others in Indigenous communitie­s

- COLIN PERKEL

The family of a teenager who killed herself in a remote Indigenous community on James Bay is calling for a coroner’s inquest into her death two years ago, which sparked a crisis that garnered internatio­nal attention and political promises of change.

In a letter to the regional coroner in northweste­rn Ontario, Stephanie Hookimaw said relatives in Attawapisk­at are still struggling to come to grips with what drove her daughter Sheridan Hookimaw, 13, to her selfinflic­ted death and what might be done to prevent further such suicides.

“It seems that nothing has changed in the community — it is business as usual,” Hookimaw wrote in a letter obtained by The Canadian Press. “The family and I think, however, that this death could have been prevented.”

The letter to Dr. Michael Wilson warns that other young people in Attawapisk­at and in Indigenous communitie­s elsewhere are suicidal. It also cites Health Institute statistics that First Nations girls kill themselves at an alarming rate — seven times higher than their non-Indigenous counterpar­ts.

A coroner’s inquest, Hookimaw said, would help get at the systemic causes of the suicides.

“An inquiry could help prevent more deaths,” Hookimaw said. “Sheridan’s tragic death should not be in vain. We want to see changes in the institutio­ns that are supposed to nourish, protect and care for our children.”

The family said it had not heard from Wilson about the letter sent two weeks ago, and he did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Sheridan’s death in October 2015 sent shock waves through her community of about 2,100 and sparked a rash of suicide attempts and threats among her peers.

The community’s declaratio­n of a state of emergency over the issue in April 2016 led to an influx of politician­s promising more resources for the strapped town.

Asimilar tragic cycle has played out time and again in other remote Indigenous communitie­s.

One politician who visited Attawapisk­at at the time, New Democrat MP Charlie Angus, said Sheridan’s family has asked him to help secure an inquest.

“There is ample scientific evidence of the need to establish interventi­on protocols in the wake of a youth suicide to prevent the appearance of ‘echo’ clusters among affected peers,” said Angus, a long-time advo- cate for his Indigenous constituen­ts.

At the same time, he said, the federal government has failed to put in place the “most basic resources” to prevent these clusters.

Sheridan’s family knows she was bullied, was a sickly girl with asthma and diabetes that required leaving Attawapisk­at for treatment, and had no hope for the future. The issue now, they say, is that other youths in the community are dealing with similar problems and also seem to have lost hope.

Jackie Hookimaw Witt, Sheridan’s aunt, said she knows similar inquests have been held in the past, but said that shouldn’t be a deterrent to holding another one — a way to draw attention to the wider issues of poverty and lack of resources plaguing her community and others like it.

“We have to use the official system that’s there to keep telling our stories, our pain,” Hookimaw Witt said in an interview from Attawapisk­at. “We have to keep telling our stories and make people understand what we’re going through.”

 ?? JORGE BARRERA/TWITTER ?? Attawapisk­at resident Sheridan Hookimaw, 13, died in October 2015. Her family believes not enough has been done since to prevent other tragedies.
JORGE BARRERA/TWITTER Attawapisk­at resident Sheridan Hookimaw, 13, died in October 2015. Her family believes not enough has been done since to prevent other tragedies.

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