Last night I listened to the voices of the parents of the young man who killed 11 people on James Smith Cree Nation, and cried along with them.
It's a parent's deepest suffering to lose a beloved child, never mind two children.
And to have to watch as children make choices that lead to destruction not only for themselves, but for others too, is gut-wrenching. You could hear it in the apologies and sobs of Myles and Damien's parents.
A friend of mine tells me that he has reached "saturation point" with all these Indigenous issues, and wonders what happened that sets their suffering on a higher rung of the existential ladder than anyone else's. Suffering is universal, he says, so how is theirs worse?
It's a mindset that's easy to fall into if we live in a world of white privilege.
While it's true that we all have our heartaches and sorrows because suffering is universal, what makes the trauma of Indigenous peoples so much worse is that they have been treated as less than human and ignored for generations by settler peoples (our ancestors included) who, knowingly or unknowingly, saw Indigenous lands and livelihoods as free for the taking.
It's centuries -- not weeks or months or years of injustice -- that has led to the gangs, drugs, addictions, and violence that took 12 people down, including two sons of the couple whose hearts are forever broken.
Our hearts need to break with theirs before we can really understand and true healing can begin.
If suffering is universal, I pray that healing can be, too.
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