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Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré pilgrimage comes with complex feelings for Indigenous Catholics
CBC
In just two days, Pope Francis will hold a mass at the Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré Basilica, about 30 kilometres northwest of Quebec City.
The basilica, a national shrine with high, vaulted ceilings, is especially significant to Indigenous Catholics in Quebec.
For a century, the faithful have made a pilgrimage to the basilica to mark the feast day of St. Anne, following nine days of prayer, or novena, that concluded this year with a mass at the basilica on Monday.
"Since I don't have any grandmothers, I never knew my two grandmothers, [St. Anne] is my grandmother," said Andrée Paul, an Innu from Pessamit in Quebec's Côte-Nord region who now lives in Quebec City.
Paul has been volunteering at the basilica for almost 30 years. She helps with translation and co-ordination during the pilgrimage and as a trained nurse will be part of a medical team during the Pope's visit.
She says the novena celebration is "a bit of a heaven on earth," and that seeing Indigenous and non-Indigenous faithful coming together brings her great joy.
As grandmothers often deliver messages between households, she says St. Anne — the grandmother of Jesus — is particularly significant to Innu communities.
"I think the good St. Anne has always been part of the spiritual life of Indigenous peoples, maybe since the arrival of the clergy," said Tania Courtois, an Innu from Eukanitshit in the Côte-Nord region of Quebec who made the journey.
"Innu pray a lot to her."
This year's pilgrimage, as hundreds of Innu and other Indigenous people are at the Domaine Sainte-Anne campground near the basilica, comes the same week that the Pope is in Canada. On Wednesday he arrives in Quebec City, where the theme of his visit is reconciliation.
And it comes after a year where more than 1,000 potential unmarked graves have been detected at the sites of several former residential schools — many run by Catholic priests — with searches still continuing today.
Jean-Guy Malec, an Innu from Nutashkuan, said the discovery of the unmarked graves shifted his perception of the Catholic clergy.
"My faith in God hasn't changed," he said. "I believe in God, but I have a different opinion now on the humans [who work for the church]."
Malec said while he is happy that the Pope is coming to Canada to apologize to Indigenous people, he personally isn't that moved by his visit.