Pope Francis to carry mass at one of Quebec’s basilicas, Indigenous pilgrim site
Global News
The event comes amid tension between the Roman Catholic Church and Indigenous people who suffered years of abuse at residential schools across Canada.
The site of the first mass in Quebec during the Pope’s weeklong visit to Canada to make amends with First Nations, Metis and Inuit communities is a renowned pilgrimage destination that merges Indigenous culture and Catholicism.
For more than 300 years, the Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre Basilica, about 30 kilometres northeast of Quebec City, has been visited by thousands of pilgrims, and St. Anne — revered in Christianity as the grandmother of Jesus — holds a unique place within some Indigenous cultures.
“I think St. Anne has always been a part of the spiritual life of Indigenous Peoples. The Innu pray to her a lot,” Tania Courtois, an Innu health co-ordinator for the community of Ekuanitshit, on Quebec’s Lower North Shore, said in a recent interview.
Courtois will be among hundreds of people from her community, including several residential school survivors, to attend Pope Francis’s mass on Thursday.
The event comes amid tension between the Roman Catholic Church and Indigenous people who suffered years of abuse at residential schools across Canada. But Ghislain Picard, chief of the Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador, says there’s no animosity or questioning of people’s personal religious choices.
“There’s a re-appropriation of our own traditional values, which include spirituality, without really abandoning the Catholic religion in many cases,” Picard said in a recent interview. “I’m not an expert, but there are many people who have probably learned to combine both.”
Denis Gagnon, a professor of anthropology at Universite de Saint-Boniface in Winnipeg, studied the origins of Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre and the devotion to St. Anne, mother of the Virgin Mary, among the Innu of northeastern Quebec.
Toward the end of the 1990s, Gagnon met with several Indigenous communities of the region to observe rituals and practices. Gagnon said Indigenous people were drawn to St. Anne because of her healing powers and her status as a strong woman. He pointed out that grandmothers play a key role in many Indigenous cultures.