'My mom didn't get to graduate': How Morgan Harris's daughter plans to honour late mother at her grad
CBC
Elle Harris never thought she'd graduate from high school, but says she'll be honouring her late mother as she walks across the stage to get her diploma next week.
The 20-year-old's mother, Morgan Harris, was one of four victims of an admitted serial killer. Last week, closing arguments were heard in Jeremy Skibicki's murder trial — where his lawyers argued he should be found not criminally responsible for the 2022 killings due to a mental disorder.
The next day, the province revealed more details about the upcoming search of the Winnipeg-area landfill where the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran, 26, are believed to be.
Now, Elle Harris is looking to the future, with less than two weeks before her graduation from Argyle Alternative High School in Winnipeg's Point Douglas neighbourhood — a school she says helped her through this difficult period of her life.
"I didn't think I was going to graduate, because I had court going on and so much stuff with my mom, and then plus on top of that I had school," she said.
"I asked for a red stole with my mom's picture on it and her name underneath, so she can still be there with me while I graduate."
Harris says she struggled with anxiety in school before she got to Argyle. She learned about her Indigenous culture there — her mother was a member of Long Plain First Nation — and has been giving back before she leaves, teaching other students how to make ribbon skirts.
"I was ashamed of myself, and I was ashamed to be in my culture, [because] that's what I was taught growing up," she said. "I want to take everything that I've learned in all my experiences and help other people out, and help them get out of that dark hole I was in."
Across from Harris's school is N'Dinawemak, a homeless shelter that her mother used. The surrounding areas serve as constant reminders of what she lost, says Harris.
"It's hard going down Main Street. It's hard going past Siloam Mission," she said.
"It's really hard because it's closure I'll never be able to get. I still think I'm going to see her around the corner."
Harris says she also took a leadership role at Argyle to educate staff and students about missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.
"We're still here and … it's really important for me to get it out there, because we're not dead, we're not runaways, we're not any of what people put out there," she said.
"We're human beings, just like everyone else, that want to have the right to grieve properly."