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Durocher makes 639-kilometre for suicide awareness, begins hunger strike

It all started on July 2 when Tristen Durocher started his 639-kilometre journey from La Ronge to Regina with friend, Christopher Merasty.
Tristen Durocher sits among the faces of family members lost to suicide in his teepee erected in Was
Tristen Durocher sits among the faces of family members lost to suicide in his teepee erected in Wascana Park across from the Saskatchewan Legislature. After finishing a 639-kilometre walk from La Ronge, Durocher is now on a hunger strike to raise awareness about suicide prevention legislation. Photo by Becky Zimmer, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Battlefords News-Optimist

It all started on July 2 when Tristen Durocher started his 639-kilometre journey from La Ronge to Regina with friend, Christopher Merasty.

Now that Durocher has made it to Regina and the steps of the Saskatchewan Legislature on July 31, his work will continue with a hunger strike on the lawns of Wascana Park.

Surrounding his teepee, faces of loved ones lost to suicide on display with permission from their families. When people see the faces, the youngest a girl of 10, Durocher wants people鈥檚 hearts to break. Durocher even knows some of the faces.

鈥淚 know children who are eight years old when they took their lives 鈥 these are not just statistics, these are human beings. And these are children. These are innocent people, who for some reason felt so hopeless that they couldn鈥檛 even believe in听tomorrow,鈥 he said in a press conference on Aug. 2.

While First Nation and Metis have higher suicide than non-aboriginal people, according to Statistics Canada, Durocher wants the province to pass legislation that would impact everyone in the province, he says.

鈥淲e鈥檙e here trying to help and pass legislation that would affect every resident of this province. The police services have high suicide rates. Even the Caucasians in the south now have high suicide rates. That was that's what pushed us into the highest rates in Canada.鈥

In northwest Saskatchewan, where Durocher鈥檚 hometown of Buffalo Narrows is located, the average suicide rate per 100,000 in 2018 was 27.9, compared to the provincial average of 18.7. The national average in 2018 was 10.3 per 100,000, according to the 2019 Provincial Auditor of Saskatchewan report.

As a Metis fiddler, Durocher has been playing at funerals in his hometown of Buffalo Narrows since he was young. He has played too many funerals, he says.

With tensions high due to recent Black Lives Matter protests, Durocher is not expecting to be forcibly removed from Wascana Park but he is expecting some push back. On the morning of Aug. 3, he was asked to move by Regina Bylaw Enforcement.

鈥淚 will not leave this lawn of my own free will. I won鈥檛 resist, but I鈥檒l be dead weight. I won鈥檛 be walking off this lawn. I鈥檒l be dragged off. Furthermore, we won鈥檛 be taking this teepee down.鈥

Durocher is currently living on tea and honey and had stopped eating on July 31. He will consider his work successful when legislation is passed that will save lives, he says.

鈥淥r maybe it鈥檚 successful when we piss off the public and they care enough to even hesitate voting for a Saskatchewan Party MLA that unanimously voted that down.鈥

Durocher鈥檚 started walking in response to the defeat of private member鈥檚 Bill 618, Saskatchewan Strategy for Suicide Prevention Act, that was put forth by Cumberland MLA, Doyle Vermette. All 44 Saskatchewan Party MLAs voted against the bill.

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