New York Post

‘Whole country horrified’ as indigenous-ancestry claim exposed as lie

- By ISABEL VINCENT

CARRIE Bourassa’s Instagram page describes her as an “Indigenous feminist” and “proud Métis” with an addiction to lattes. Only the penchant for caffeine was true.

Bourassa, a professor in the department of community health and epidemiolo­gy at the University of Saskatchew­an and a leading expert on indigenous issues, has been exposed as a fraud. A family tree prepared by a group of academics who were suspicious of her ancestral claims shows that Bourassa is of Swiss, Hungarian, Polish and Czechoslov­akian origins with not one ounce of indigenous blood.

Yet for decades, Bourassa has identified herself as Métis — a group recognized as one of Canada’s aboriginal peoples, along with First Nations and Inuit. She also claims some traces of Tlingit and Anishinaab­e heritage in her background.

“When I was very young, I knew I was not a Caucasian person,” Bourassa recently told the Saskatoon Star Phoenix. “I knew there was something very different about me.”

During a 2019 TEDx Talk, Bourassa wore a blue woven cloak and held a feather as she introduced herself as Morning Star Bear, a spirit name translated from the Tlingit language. She said she grew up in a dysfunctio­nal family that struggled with alcoholism and violence. Her only saving grace was the Métis grandfathe­r she called gramps, who took her on excursions to tan hides, pick berries and gave her moccasins and mukluks — boots made of seal skin worn in the Canadian Arctic.

After a report by Canada’s national broadcaste­r, the CBC, raised serious questions about Bourassa’s heritage, the University of Saskatchew­an announced last month that it had placed her on paid leave while it conducts a sweeping independen­t investigat­ion into her origins led by an attorney who is an expert on indigenous law.

Bourassa was also suspended as scientific director of the indigenous­health branch of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

In recent days, university administra­tors and indigenous leaders across the country, who traditiona­lly rely on self-identifica­tion in determinin­g native ancestry, are calling for more rigorous standards.

“It’s a crazy story,” said Caroline Tait, a Métis professor of medical anthropolo­gy at the University of Saskatchew­an who has worked with Bourassa for more than 10 years and recently helped expose Bourassa’s origins.

“It’s crazy that she got away with it for so long. The whole country is horrified.”

BOURASSA, 48, grew up in a white middle-class family in Regina, the capital of Saskatchew­an with a population of just under 240,000. Her father, Ron Weibel, was a small-business owner who operated car-cleaning companies in the city.

“We lived in Regina most of our lives, married young, had two children, started businesses of our own, one of which we ran for over 30 years,” Weibel says on his Web site for Berry Hills Estates, which sells custom homes near Katepwa Lake, an hour outside Regina.

“Our lives were hectic, to say the least, with two shops to run and two daughters with school and sports activities, we were always on the go!” adds Weibel, who is the president of Berry Hills Developmen­ts, according to his LinkedIn page.

But Bourassa remembers her childhood differentl­y, and credited her grandfathe­r for helping her escape a grim existence.

In the introducti­on to her 2017 book, “Listening to the Beat of Our Drum: Indigenous Parenting in Contempora­ry Society,” Bourassa describes her grandfathe­r urging her to get an education to escape the poverty and violence that was rampant in her family, which included an alcoholic grandmothe­r and absent parents.

“My gramps was gently whispering to me, and telling me I would be safe,” wrote Bourassa. “But he said something else — he said, ‘My girl, you will be the one to stop this. You are going to grow up to be a doctor or a lawyer. You do not want to be like this. You hear me?’ ”

Family photograph­s tell a different story. Bourassa is pictured as a little girl with her white maternal grandparen­ts, Ladislav and Gertrude Knezacek. Ladislav, who was born in Saskatchew­an in 1928, is also pictured in uniform. His family came to Canada from Hungary, and Ladislav appears nothing like the Métis “gramps” Bourassa describes in her speeches. Gertrude’s family arrived in Canada from Bohemia, a part of Czechoslov­akia, before she was born in 1933. Another photo shows Bourassa, her husband, Chad, and their two daughters happily celebratin­g Christmas.

BOURASSA went on to become one of the most important indigenous health experts in Canada. In addition to her teaching position at the University of Saskatchew­an, she was scientific director of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research Institute of Indigenous Peoples’ Health, a federal agency that helps distribute millions of dollars in grants for indigenous health research in Canada. Bourassa once bragged that she made nearly $400,000 a year as an academic, a source told The Post.

In her personal narrative, Bourassa has long credited Clifford LaRocque, a Métis elder, long deceased, with helping her identify with the group when she was in her early 20s. She said LaRocque adopted her after he claimed to have researched her ancestry in 2002. Bourassa told the CBC that she never saw the proof he said he found.

“He was a well-respected leader in my community,” Bourassa told a Canadian Senate panel in June 2012. “He knew many of the Métis families. Even though many of us had gaps in our histories, he was able to help fill those gaps with his immense historical and geographic­al knowledge.”

Both Bourassa and her younger sister, Jody Burnett, began to identify as Métis as young women. The designatio­n came with a few perks, namely thousands of dollars in educationa­l grants that the federal government typically hands out to indigenous Canadians. Both Bourassa and her sister would go on to earn Ph.D.s in their respective fields. Burnett has a doctorate in educationa­l psychology, and Bourassa earned hers in indigenous health.

In the introducti­on to her thesis, which she completed in March 2008, Bourassa thanks the Weibels for their support:

“I would also like to thank my parents, Ron and Diane Weibel, who sacrificed so that I could achieve my dream. You have been cheering me on and encouragin­g me from the very beginning and I am so blessed to have you as my parents.”

Calls and an e-mail to her parents were not returned this week.

Bourassa continued to identify as Métis as she rose in academia. But her sister did not.

Burnett hasn’t claimed to be Métis since 2014, she told the CBC, when her “husband completed a family tree through a genealogic­al software program. From that point on, I did not feel certain of my heritage and as such, have stopped identifyin­g as

Métis.”

Burnett’s decision to stop identifyin­g as Métis angered Bourassa. In a 2018 e-mail to Tait viewed by The Post, Bourassa wrote, “My sister got thousands of dollars in Métis scholarshi­ps that put her through her Masters and Ph.D. and I was so proud at first — until she was done and then would have nothing to do with the Métis people who supported her.”

TAIT and other academics began to have doubts about Bourassa after a student questioned her background a few years ago, Tait told The Post.

“We began to map out her kinship,” Tait recalled.

The effort resulted in a 77-page complaint that Tait and other academics presented to the University of Saskatchew­an earlier this year. “We went to the school hat in hand and asked them if they could please take this on because we saw it as an example of research misconduct,” Tait said. “A lot of us rely on Carrie for funding our projects, and the whole thing just seemed wrong.”

When university administra­tors refused to act on the complaint, Tait enlisted the help of the CBC. “At the time that they denied the claim, I told them we would work with a journalist to make it all public,” she said. “There’s been enormous outrage across the country over this.”

Bourassa, a mother of two daughters who is married to a retired Regina cop who also identifies as Métis, did not return The Post’s calls for comment. But she has said that she has twice traced her own roots and has received membership­s in local Métis groups in Regina.

A press release issued on her behalf by Team Bourassa “an Indigenous collective who choose anonymity at this time” said she is exercising her right to self-identify as indigenous and has not inappropri­ately taken opportunit­ies or educationa­l funding from indigenous people.

“Dr. Carrie Bourassa has not falsely identified as Indigenous nor taken space away from Indigenous peoples, either in the form of student funding, grants or career advancemen­ts,” the statement said. “She has earned her profession­al status and merit through hard work, self-funding and sheer determinat­ion.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? ‘A CRAZY STORY’: University of Saskatchew­an epidemiolo­gy professor Carrie Bourassa (far left and above, as a child with her white maternal grandparen­ts) earned thousands of dollars in grants earmarked for indigenous Canadians by falsely claiming Métis heritage.
‘A CRAZY STORY’: University of Saskatchew­an epidemiolo­gy professor Carrie Bourassa (far left and above, as a child with her white maternal grandparen­ts) earned thousands of dollars in grants earmarked for indigenous Canadians by falsely claiming Métis heritage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States