Truro News

‘Our community needs help’

Remote Ontario First Nation in shock after third girl kills herself

- By Colin Perkel

Grief-stricken members of a remote northern Ontario community were still struggling to cope on Friday after the suicide of yet another 12-year-old girl sparked fears a death pact could claim even more young lives.

The death last week of Jenara Roundsky, the third pre-teen member of the Wapekeka First Nation to die by suicide this year, prompted an anguished cry for outside help.

In a declaratio­n of a state of emergency this week, Wapekeka’s chief and band council noted the community – which also saw 15 young people kill themselves between 1989 and 1999 – desperatel­y needed help.

“These losses and recent suicides have put the community in a state of crisis,” the band said in a formal resolution. “Community members are going through a state of shock where they have been retraumati­zed to a point where they cannot help themselves.”

Of particular concern, the band said, were worries that other youngsters, who were following first responders around the community, were being exposed to traumatizi­ng circumstan­ces

after the discovery of Jenara’s body sparked a frantic search for others at risk.

Jenara’s social media suggests a troubled tween whose postings were often dark.

“Suicide people are just angels that want to go home,” she reposted recently.

According to a statement from her grandparen­ts, the girl had been diagnosed with “opposition­al defiant disorder” – an illness they said affected her thinking.

“Her actions were on an impulse,” they said.

They also said everyone had done their best to help her and stressed they cast no blame for her death.

Sol Mamakwa, health adviser for the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, which represents 49 Ontario First Nations communitie­s including Wapekeka, said Friday that community leaders were exhausted. Among the immediate assistance requested were calls for 20 Canadian Rangers to come in to provide support and help from the Red Cross.

What’s clear, Mamakwa said, is that something needs to change with the delivery of mental health care, given that youngsters simply can’t get the help they need.

“The current approach to crisis, the current approach to mental health, it’s not working for the people,” Mamakwa said. “We need to come up with a process that is communityd­riven and right now that’s not happening.”

In January, Chantell Fox, 12, killed herself two days after her friend Jolynn Winter died by suicide in the fly-in Oji-Cree community of 430 about 600 kilometres north of Thunder Bay, Ont.

Last summer, the First Nation warned the federal government about a developing suicide pact, but indigenous leaders said the plea for help went unheeded.

“Our community needs help,” Wapekeka spokesman Joshua Frogg said in January after the girls’ deaths. “My chief and council cannot function at 100 per cent capacity because they are preoccupie­d with the hurt, the pain, the ongoing crisis.”

In a statement this week, Ontario’s indigenous relations minister, David Zimmer, called the suicide rate in First Nation communitie­s “devastatin­g.”

“We have heard the concerns raised by indigenous communitie­s and I know that we must do more to ensure that young people have the support that they need,” Zimmer said. “The conditions that lead to despair and hopelessne­ss are complex and multi-layered.”

Zimmer said provincial and federal officials were, among other things, reviewing proposals submitted by the First Nation for a youth centre and a three-year recreation­al activity program for youth.

 ?? PHoTo CouRTESy DoNNIE RouNDSky vIA CP ?? Jenara Roundsky, 12, of the Wapekeka First Nation in northern Ontario killed herself last week.
PHoTo CouRTESy DoNNIE RouNDSky vIA CP Jenara Roundsky, 12, of the Wapekeka First Nation in northern Ontario killed herself last week.

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