Duane Howard, Revenant actor, shines light on suicide crisis in Attawapiskat - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:33 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Duane Howard, Revenant actor, shines light on suicide crisis in Attawapiskat

The actor who played Elk Dog in the Academy Award-winning film The Revenant says the suicide crisis in Attawapiskat and other Indigenous communities has inspired him to take action.

'It takes a community to come together as one,' says Nuu-Chah-Nulth actor

Duane Howard, who starred alongside Leonardo DiCaprio in The Revenant, is trying to raise more national awareness about the suicide crisis in Attawapiskat and other First Nations. (The Associated Press)

The actor who played Elk Dog in the Academy Award-winning film The Revenant says the suicide crisis in Attawapiskat and other Indigenous communities has inspired him to takeaction.

"When this happened in Attawapiskat I was just like, 'I need to go there. I need to address this,'" Nuu-Chah-Nulth actorDuane Howard told CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning on Tuesday.

First Nations people are "literally crying out for help," he said, "and it's something that we can't ignore anymore."

In April Attawapiskatdeclared a state of emergency,saying they were overwhelmed by the number of attempted suicides in the remotecommunity on James Bay.

On one night alone that month, 11 people attempted to take their own lives. From September to April, about 100 people in the First Nationattempted suicide. The youngest was 11, the oldest 71. One person died.

Listen to the full interview with Howard here.

'One heart, one mind, one prayer'

Two non-profitgroups I Love First Peoples and the First Peoples Innovation Centre are hoping to raise moreawareness about the issue.

Form June to October, people can donate online to help fund support services, shout "I love Attawapiskat" on social media, andpack gift-filled shoeboxesto be mailed toyouths in crisis.

Howard became the initiative's spokesperson.

"People are saying we've got to help our young people, but it takes a community to come together as one. And there's a saying: one heart, one mind, one prayer, we can all move forward," he said.

"It's important that these things, we do not neglect anymore. We have to stand up as a community and be there for one another. Because it's not only happening to youth, it's not only happening to our young people, it's happening to adults also. They fall into depression and loneliness and hurt and they feel like nobody's there."

Personal struggle

His own history inspired him in part, Howard said. He's lost relatives of his own, andwas entrenched in street life in Vancouver as a young man after surviving residential school, struggling with addictions, bullying anda general feeling of not fitting in.

"Physically I was decaying," he said, and at 23 years old he made the choice to break away from that life.

"If I can do it, anyone can," Howardsaid.

Since starring in The RevenantHoward says he's been travelling Canada, sharing his experiences.

"It really opened up the doorways for me to my community and all over, across Canada and the United States."