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Canadian Canoe Pilgrimage: Journeying toward dialogue and reconciliation


Source: Jesuits in English Canada/CCCB

On 21 July 2017, a group of 30 men and women began a 26-day canoe pilgrimage of some 800 kilometres, inspired by the Canadian Catholic Church's Calls for Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

They departed from the historic sites of Sainte-Marie among the Hurons and the Canadian Martyrs Shrine in Midland, Ontario, and arrived on 15 August, the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, at the First Nations community of Kahnawake, near Montreal, which is also the home of the Shrine of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha and where she is buried. Following the traditional trading route used by the First Nations, as well as the 17th-century Jesuit missionaries and the early European explorers, including Samuel de Champlain, the canoeists have travelled through Georgian Bay, the French River, Lake Nipissing, and then the Mattawa and Ottawa Rivers, and will finish on the Saint Lawrence River.

Working in collaboration with their project manager, Jesuit seminarian Erik Sorensen, the participants were from different parts of the country, representing various Aboriginal groups, religious communities and other organizations. They included Kyle Ferguson, Advisor for Ecclesial and Interfaith Relations with the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB), as well as Sister Eva Solomon, from the Henvey Inlet Ojibwe First Nation and a member of the Sisters of St Joseph of Sault Ste Marie, who is currently based in Winnipeg and is part of the Building Bridges program founded by the Western Assembly of Catholic Bishops and focuses on Indigenous inculturation and interculturation of faith.

Along their pilgrimage route, the canoeists were greeted by local parish and Aboriginal communities as well as communities of religious life. Upon their arrival in Gatineau, on 9 August, they were welcomed by the Most Reverend Roger Ébacher, Archbishop Emeritus of Gatineau, on behalf of Archbishop Paul-André Durocher. The next day, the Most Reverend Terrence Prendergast, SJ, Archbishop of Ottawa, welcomed them to Notre Dame Cathedral Basilica for a Eucharistic celebration and a meal, followed by a talk by the Jesuit historian Father Jacques Monet on the history of the route they are following.

The canoe pilgrimage has its own bilingual website: https://canoepilgrimage.com/, and can also be followed through a Facebook page entitled Canadian Canoe Pilgrimage.

Watch a film on Youtube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-8_mleRuG8

See also: Jesuits in UK - CANOE PILGRIMAGE OF ENCOUNTER AND RECONCILIATION - www.jesuit.org.uk/node/5446

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