National Post

MÉTIS ACTIVIST FOUGHT FOR HER PEOPLE

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ST. ALBERT, A LT A.•Mét is activist and retired senator Thelma Chalifoux has died.

Chalifoux’s daughter, Debbie Coulter, says her mother died Sept. 22 at a care home in St. Albert, near Edmonton, and had been in declining health for some years. She was 88.

Chalifoux was appointed to the upper chamber in 1997 and served until she retired at age 75 in 2004.

Chalifoux was born in Calgary in 1929 and noted when she was named to the Senate that she raised seven children, so she was used to hard work.

She began working in community developmen­t when she was offered a job by the Métis Associatio­n of Alberta, and she later served as chairwoman of the Métis National Council Senate and vice-president of the Aboriginal Women’s Business Developmen­t Corporatio­n.

She was also the first Métis woman on the Senate of the University of Alberta.

“We spent the last couple of days in her room surroundin­g her with love, music and stories,” said Coulter, noting children, grandchild­ren and great- grandchild­ren were present during that time. “We like to think that she could still hear us.”

In her job with Alberta’s Métis Associatio­n, Chalifoux was sent from the cities of south and central Alberta to the northern bush country of Slave Lake, where she was to spend the next 12 years.

Working with the Company of Young Canadians, a government agency that brought young workers in to help people in poor communitie­s organize to improve their lot, she began fighting for better conditions for her people, especially better housing.

“When you develop communitie­s, it’s like working in the trenches. You train the people to become self- sufficient,” Chalifoux said in 1997.

She became one of the first Indigenous women to broadcast on private radio, Peace River’s CKYL.

She received a National Aboriginal Achievemen­t Award in 1994.

During her time as senator, she appointed a task force to consult with Edmonton’s Indigenous community about violent Indigenous youth gangs, and argued for better education and partnershi­ps between the community, police and other Canadians.

She also challenged a claim by then- Alberta premier Ralph Klein that she should have been elected to the post, noting she could have won an election.

Chalifoux said she wouldn’t have a chance because she was a woman, Métis and didn’t have the finances for a campaign.

Coulter said after leaving the Senate, her mother founded an organizati­on to preserve and protect the Métis history in northern Alberta, called the Michif Institute. Coulter and her sister took it over when their mother became ill, and a version of it continues today.

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