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Voices ᐋ ᐄᔮᔨᐧᒫᓂᐧᐃᒡ

Attawapiskat loses a good friend

BY Xavier Kataquapit Nov 8, 2019

Attawapiskat suffered a tragic loss October 29 when Father Rodrigue Vézina, Missionary Oblate of Mary Immaculate, passed away in Richelieu, Quebec, aged 87 years. Father Vézina served the diocese of Moosonee for 54 years with 43 years of that time at the St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in Attawapiskat.

Many people were saddened when he retired in the summer of 2015. Even though he had left, many still took time from their annual religious pilgrimages in southern Quebec to visit Father Vézina in his retirement.

He holds a very special place in our community. He arrived as a young man in 1973 after having quickly learned to fluently speak the Cree language with the James Bay dialect. Our Elders and community members appreciated his great command of the language. Local Elders addressed him as Noo-tah-wee-noo (father) and as children we were taught to do the same.

He helped to organize the building of a short-wave broadcast channel for our local church. The signal provided our small community with a local television channel that gave us a live feed of the church service. At the same time, Father Vézina used it as an opportunity to communicate with us every day.

Every morning while we had breakfast, we would view him broadcast some short announcements on blank white paper sheets and in marker he had written out for the screen. It was the audio that was most important as he started the daily broadcast with a short series of prayers and then would read out from his records the births of community members, the marriages and the deaths of people who had passed long ago. My parents and other Elders in the community loved to be reminded of these important events in our lives.

Father Vézina was there to baptize us at the start of our lives and then again for many at the end of life. We saw him every week on Sunday and as we grew older, he gave us lessons at the local parish hall next to the church to prepare us for our first communion and Catholic confirmation. He was such a patient teacher as he had to do his best to keep the attention of classes of a dozen or so rowdy young boys and girls.

My parents encouraged me and my brothers to take part in assisting the priest as altar boys and this meant we spent many evenings preparing for services. I recall participating in many services with my brothers and many of my friends. We did not always understand in detail what was happening, but it felt good helping out this kind and enthusiastic priest.

Father Vézina touched on so many important parts of our lives in the community. He shared in our joys when children were born and were baptized. He celebrated with the community during every school graduation event. Everyone remembers a wedding he preceded over for many families in the community.

He was also an important connection to our Elders who held a strong Catholic faith. In their old age, many could no longer attend regular church services but Father Vézina made the rounds during the week to visit every Elder who wanted to receive communion. Yes, it was all about religion but Father Vézina was also about community. He made a lifelong commitment to his friends in Attawapiskat.

Father Vézina also was there with us in our darkest moments, helping many of us through difficult times. He was a priest but also a social worker and advocate for the people. He wore many hats.

He was such an integral part of our community that we named our high school after him. He was surprised by this honour and was there front row centre when the Vézina Secondary School opened in the early 1990s.

Sadly, his passing comes at a time when our historical St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church has been slated for demolition by the church hierarchy. Engineers have declared the structure unsafe and plans are being made for a new church.

In our chaotic world of troubles, frustrations and difficulties, Father Vézina was one source of stability we could always count on. Even with all the troubles that the Catholic Church had historically inflicted on our Elders, our parents and grandparents, Father Vézina gave us a different perspective. He affirmed our faith in something greater than ourselves. He was a friend to our Elders and he was a source of goodness and love that we could share with one another.

Above all, he left behind a powerful legacy of dedication, love and devotion for our small community. And that didn’t have so much to do with religion as it was more about this very good man and his honourable deeds.

Kitchi-Meegwetch Noo-tah-wee-noo (Thank You, Father).

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Xavier Kataquapit is Cree from Attawapiskat First Nation on the James Bay coast. He is a writer and columnist who has written about his life and Indigenous issues since 1998.