National Post

’It still hurts’: Families hope for new homes after mass stabbing

‘Burn your place down and start over,’ victim says

- Kelly Geraldine Malone

Brian (Buggy) Burns says it’s the small things he misses the most, like sitting down and having coffee with his wife nearly every morning for more than three decades.

Since his wife, Bonnie, and son Gregory were killed in a mass stabbing, coffee just hasn’t tasted the same. Jokes haven’t been as funny.

And, Burns says, there’s no place to call home.

“I miss talking to her and joking around,” Burns says while holding back tears. “I’d make sure I had her coffee for her before she went to work.”

The Sept. 4 stabbing rampage left 11 people dead and 18 injured on the James Smith Cree Nation and in the nearby village of Weldon, Sask., northeast of Saskatoon.

Myles Sanderson, 32, the suspect in the attacks, later died in police custody.

Houses became crime scenes on the First Nation of about 1,900 people 170 kilometres northeast of Saskatoon. Even after police left, some families devastated by the massacre can’t fathom returning to those homes.

“It still hurts,” says James Smith Cree Nation Chief Wally Burns.

He expects there are four families, including that of Brian Burns, who are struggling to decide whether to go back to their houses. The First Nation is trying to find solutions, he says, including providing ready-to-move homes that can be placed at a site but don’t have a basement.

But the chief says it relies on funding from Ottawa.

“It’s a slow process with government.”

Indigenous Services Canada will provide funding for four homes, said Matthew Gutsch, a spokespers­on for the department. However, due to winter conditions they may not be ready for use until next spring, Gutsch added in an email.

In the meantime, he said the department will provide funding for families who cannot return to the community.

Indigenous Services Canada said a total of 17 homes were damaged during the rampage. Funding is also being provided to clean, restore and repair those that won’t be replaced, Gutsch said.

The devastatin­g memories of the deaths of Brian Burns’ wife and son are held in the walls of their house.

Bonnie, 48, and Gregory, 28, were both killed during the attack at the family home. Gloria Lydia Burns, a 61-year-old community member, also died trying to assist Bonnie, who called for help from her home.

There were three other children and two grandchild­ren in there at the time. Another 14-year-old son was stabbed but survived.

Brian Burns says that son shakes when he thinks about returning.

Brian Burns built the home seven years ago. After the massacre, he says there was blood everywhere.

Now he wants to see it burned down and a monument and three crosses put in its place.

“When you have a murder in your house, you are supposed to burn your place down and start over,” he says. “So, I’m just following customs and protocol from what my traditiona­l ways are.”

Since the stabbings, Brian Burns has been sharing a hotel room in Melfort, 40 kilometres south of the First Nation, with his three surviving sons, granddaugh­ter and grandson.

“We’re tired of hotel life. We’re tired of takeout meals,” he says. “We just want some home-cooked meals and a home.”

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