Vancouver Sun

Manitoba Metis leave to meet Pope

Delegation first since apology for abuse at schools

- KELLY GERALDINE MALONE

• A Metis group from Manitoba departed for Rome Monday ahead of a meeting with Pope Francis at the Vatican on Thursday.

The delegation from the Manitoba Metis Federation will be the first to meet the head of the Roman Catholic Church since he apologized to Indigenous people for the conduct of church leaders running residentia­l schools.

The Pope apologized at the Vatican early this month following a week of meetings with Metis, Inuit and First Nations delegates.

The Manitoba Metis Federation had a separate meeting organized with Francis.

Delegates include residentia­l school survivors, elders and youth.

David Chartrand, the federation's president, says many Metis are deeply connected to the church.

“Now that His Holiness has issued an apology to all Indigenous peoples, we can focus our meeting on the relationsh­ip between the Red River Metis and the Catholic Church — past, present and future,” Chartrand said Monday.

Some bishops will be accompanyi­ng the Manitoba Metis delegates to the Vatican.

“It is the desire of all the Bishops in Canada to move forward with reconcilia­tion and to build strong relationsh­ips with Canada's Indigenous Peoples,” Richard Gagnon, Archbishop of Winnipeg, said in a news release.

An estimated 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend residentia­l schools, more than 60 per cent of which were run by the Catholic Church.

On April 1, the pontiff stood before a room of nearly 200 Indigenous delegates and asked for God's forgivenes­s for the actions of the Catholic Church.

“I want to say to you with all my heart: I am very sorry,” Francis said in Italian. “And I join my brothers, the Canadian bishops, in asking your pardon.”

Francis also said he would come to Canada, likely this summer.

Chartrand said he will request the Pope come to Manitoba to “understand why we need to renew our relationsh­ip, particular­ly in our small and remote communitie­s, many of which the Church is a central part of.”

A Catholic priest played a significan­t role in Metis leader Louis Riel's founding of what would become Manitoba. Rev. Noel-Joseph Ritchot led the delegation Riel sent to Ottawa to negotiate the provisiona­l government's entry into Confederat­ion.

Riel himself was Catholic but also wrote about his issues with the church.

The Manitoba Metis Federation organized the separate meeting with the Pope after the group withdrew from the Metis National Council in 2021 following years of internal conflict.

The Metis National Council was part of the larger delegation earlier this month.

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