First Nations Voice

January 2016

Building bridges between all communities

Issue link: http://publications.winnipegfreepress.com/i/621633

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JANUARY 2016 • PAGE 13 ProudlyStanding withFirstNations, Inuit&MétisFamilies Deanne Crothers MLAforSt.James 204-415-0883 DeanneCrothers.ca Greg Selinger MLAforSt.Boniface 204-237-9247 GregSelinger.ca Nancy Allan MLAforSt.Vital 204-237-8771 NancyAllan.ca Tom Nevakshonoff MLAforInterlake 204-664-2000 TomNevakshonoff.ca Ron Lemieux MLAforDawsonTrail 204-878-4644 Ron-Lemieux.ca Ron Kostyshyn MLAforSwanRiver 204-734-4900 RonKostyshyn.ca Clarence Pettersen MLAforFlinFlon 204-687-3367 ClarencePettersen.ca Kerri Irvin-Ross MLAforFortRichmond 204-475-9433 KerriIrvinRoss.ca Sharon Blady MLAforKirkfieldPark 204-832-2318 SharonBlady.ca Melanie Wight MLAforBurrows 204-421-9414 MelanieWight.ca James Allum MLAforFort Garry-Riverview 204-475-2270 JamesAllum.ca Amanda Lathlin MLAforThePas 204-623-2034 AmandaLathlin.ca Gord Mackintosh MLAforSt.Johns 204-582-1550 GordMackintosh.ca Dave Chomiak MLAforKildonan 204-334-5060 DaveChomiak.ca It was four years ago that I first interviewed Lady K about her struggles to get off the street and I wanted to know what she thought about Tina Fontaine. When I first read about Fontaine and her struggles, I couldn't help but notice the parallels between her and Lady K. Both had lost a parent that sent each on a downward spiral into drugs and working to support that habit. And like Fontaine, Lady K met an older man who exploited her addiction. There are differences though. Lady K survived a vicious sexual assault only to return to the streets. This despite she knew and was friends with some of the women who either went missing or murdered. She doesn't have an easy answer for why she got off the streets but four years later finds her in a different place. Lady K is in a stable relationship expecting her second child since leaving the streets behind but says her sobriety remains a constant struggle. She is still worried about young women like Tina Fontaine still on the street. "You see them when you drive in the area, " said Lady K. "You can't help but feel sorry for them. And you want to tell them there's more to life than being out there. I've done that in the past. Talked to them. Let them know where I was and where I am now." However, Lady K realizes that it would have been hard to get through to her at that age. She still tries though. "But they don't listen," said Lady K. "I think there has to be more resources out there that these girls are aware of to try and help them. That there is a better way." She put her education on hold after finding out that she was going to have another baby but Lady K is determined to finish and move on and become a social worker. She enjoys volunteering her time and connecting with people. "I don't put any blame on the girls who are out there because they're just trying to support their habit. There only doing whatever they have to do to escape whatever they're feeling," she said. She knows that without men constantly on the prowl for young women that it would cut down on the numbers of girls out on the street. And when she was first interviewed four years ago, Lady K was thinking of using her real name but without missing a beat insists on her anonymity. "It's not for me," said Lady K. "It's for my children. I want to be honest with them about who I am and what I've done but I want to tell them when the time is right. When they can, you know, handle it and maybe understand." And she wants people to realize that there are many more women and girls out there just like Tina Fontaine. NO ONE IS dISpOSABlE By Trevor Greyeyes

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