Hope and sorrow felt in Manawan as community members march, 2 years after Joyce Echaquan's death - Action News
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Hope and sorrow felt in Manawan as community members march, 2 years after Joyce Echaquan's death

"I was scared that people would forget her, little by little," said Carol Dub, Joyce Echaquan's husband. "It's important to send the message that the problem isn't solved."

Important to send message that 'the problem isn't solved,' says Carol Dub, Echaquan's husband

The husband of the late Joyce Echaquan, Carol Dub, held the youngest of their seven children, Carol Jr., during a march in Manawan on Wednesday to commemorate Echaquan, two years after her death. (Marie-Laure Josselin/Radio-Canada)

A toddler bounced on the shoulders of Carol Dub as he walked down the streets of Manawan to commemorate his latewife and the mother of their seven children, Joyce Echaquan.

On Wednesday, alarge crowd of people with purple accessories Echaquan'sfavourite colour marched quietly, save for the chatter of children and jingles on some women's skirts.They carried huge banners decorated withpurple hand prints and purple bows, paintings andpictures of Echaquan, that said "Justice for Joyce."

"Seeing all the people, it makes me feel good I was scared that people would forget her, little by little," Dub told Radio-Canada.

"It's been two years. It's important to send the message, also,that the problem isn't solved."

Perched high, Carol Jr. lookedaround and clutchedat his father's cap. The toddleris the couple's youngest and was only a few months old when his mother died.

Two years after filming herself in agony as nurses berated her before her death at 37 years oldat Joliette Hospital on Sept. 28, 2020, Echaquan's name continues to resonate across Quebec.

The Coalition Avenir Qubec (CAQ) governmentstill refuses to say systemic racism exists in the province, despite a coroner's assessment that it had contributed to her death,but many see what happened to Echaquanas stark evidence that it does.

Dozens of people marched to commemorate the two-year anniversary of Joyce Echaquan's death in Manawan Wednesday. (Marie-Laure Josselin/Radio-Canada)

Dr. Stanley Vollant, a well-known Innu surgeon from Pessamit who works at Notre-Dame Hospital in Montreal, sayshis own views changed after her death.

"I didn't believe my ownpeople and it's not because I wasn't listening to them, but because I thought the system was perfect, was good, that there were just communications issues," Vollant said on CBC Radio'sDaybreak.

Vollant said the stories he'd been hearing for years, of Indigenous people experiencing racism in health care, surfaced and made him want to effect change, "to get systemic racism out of the system and to make a culturally safe environment for Indigenous people in the health-care system in Quebec."

Stanley Vollant, the first Innu person to become a gastrointestinal surgeon in Quebec, says he now believes the health system must change. (Julia Page/CBC)

Since then, Vollant has given talks to several Quebec hospitals about the barriers Indigenous people face to get safe access tohealth care. He says he's noticed an improvement in his colleagues' understanding of Indigenous people, but he says it will take years to build trust.

"People in communities like Pessamit, like Manawan, don't go to the hospitals close to their homes because they're still afraid they're going to be mistreated," he said.

Sipi Flamand, the chief of the Atikamekw Council of Manawan, said people in the community have reported that not much has changed in local settler health and social services, but that there hasbeen "an awakening in Quebec society" as a whole.

"I think Quebec is ready to admit there is systemic racism;it's the State that doesn't want to change its position," Flamand said.

Community members donned purple, Echaquan's favourite colour. (Marie-Laure Josselin/Radio-Canada)

He said the purpose of the commemoration was to "give strength to Carol, to the family, to show the community's mobilization." Last year, on the anniversary of Echaquan's death, a march was held outside the hospital in Joliette.

Issues not 'resolved'

Earlier this week, a CBC News story revealed the compulsory training Quebec's Health Ministry developed after Echaquan's death includes factual errors and makes no mention of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the Viens Commission or the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

Sipi Flamand, the chief of the Atikamekw Council of Manawan, said community members report little change in settler health and social services since Echaquan's death. (Marie-Laure Josselin/Radio-Canada)

In the first leaders' debate on TVA three weeks ago, CAQLeader Franois Legault, who is seeking re-election as premier,prompted outrage from the Echaquan family and Atikamekw chiefs for saying the "problem that happened at the Joliette hospital with Mrs. Joyce is now resolved."

Legault added that he'd met with Duband that "it is settled."

The law firm representing the Echaquan family, including Dub, issued a sharp rebuke, saying he ran into Legault at the Pope's Quebec visitafter the premierhad ignored several requests for a meeting.

"If the premier had taken the time to meet the Echaquan family, or if he had simply taken the time to read the coroner's reporthe would have realized that the systemic problems that led to the death of Ms. Echaquan are not 'settled' by mainly esthetic changes," wrote lawyer Pierre Martin-Mnard, adding that to think so was "magical thinking."

A man and woman pose for a photo, their heads close together.
Carol Dub and his wife, the late Joyce Echaquan. (Facebook)

Martin-Mnard said Dub had only agreed that the appointment of Guy Niquay, who is Atikamekw from Manawan, as assistant CEO of the local health board, the CISSS de Lanaudire, had contributed to some improvements.

Legault later apologized.

The family is expected to submit oneor several civil suits Thursday related to Echaquan's death, according to Radio-Canada, though it is so far unclear who will be targeted by the legal action.

The Quebec government has yet to adopt Joyce's Principle,a document created by the council of the Atikamekw Nation and the Atikamekw Council of Manawanaimed at guaranteeing that Indigenous people have equitable access to health and social services without discrimination.

with files from Kanhehs:io Deer