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- <text id=93TT0992>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: "I Can't Cry Anymore"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CANADA, Page 51
- "I Can't Cry Anymore"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A bleak Labrador Indian community has become Suicide Village
- </p>
- <p>By GAVIN SCOTT DAVIS/INLET
- </p>
- <p> It was almost a routine night for native constable Simeon Tsnakapesh
- as he patrolled the streets of Davis Inlet, a ramshackle village
- of about 500 Innu Indians on Labrador's north-east coast. Alerted
- by a neighbor's complaint, he tracked a group of noisy youths
- to an abandoned wooden shack near the ice-locked government
- wharf. Prying open the door, the cop found a horrifying scene:
- six youths, ages 12 to 14, sniffing deadly gasoline fumes from
- green garbage bags on the floor of the unheated building. "You
- couldn't hear nothing but the wheeze from the bags," relates
- Tsnakapesh. "Two of them were pretty well passed out completely."
- </p>
- <p> By the time addictions counselor Bill Partridge got to the shack
- minutes later, all hell was breaking loose. "The kids were screaming
- insults, throwing themselves around at the walls," recounts
- Partridge. "They said they wanted to die. They were all suicidal."
- The local Innu Council immediately chartered a plane to take
- the youngsters, under police escort, to a group home near Goose
- Bay, 186 miles to the south. Later, three more gasoline-sniffing
- youths were evacuated to await transfer to another native rehabilitation
- center.
- </p>
- <p> Self-destruction is virtually a civic preoccupation at Davis
- Inlet: when Partridge, 38, a former policeman from Halifax,
- Nova Scotia, arrived two years ago, he found himself involved
- in suicide intervention at a rate of four cases a month. "Every
- adult in the community has contemplated suicide," he says. "Every
- second person has attempted it in one form or another." Nearly
- one-quarter of the population tried in the past year alone.
- Partridge also found that 95% of the adult population suffer
- from alcoholism, and estimates that of 360 children, more than
- 10% are "problem sniffers" of gasoline.
- </p>
- <p> Shocking as they are, the statistics are at risk of adding to
- the dehumanization that breeds the despair here and in other
- desolate native settlements dotting Canada's north. Life in
- Davis Inlet is an economic dead end. Only a handful of natives
- hold jobs at the post office, school and nursing station. There
- is no industry except the impatient wait for welfare checks,
- ranging from $237 to $316 a month per family. As many as 20
- people live crammed into a single unpainted clapboard dwelling.
- None of the 67 houses administered by the local Innu Council
- have running water or sewerage. Uncollected garbage is strewn
- along rutted snowmobile paths that serve as de facto streets
- eight months of the year.
- </p>
- <p> The calamity is rooted in poverty, but it is compounded by years
- of government neglect. Now numbering 1,500 in all, the Labrador
- Innu are subsidized by Ottawa but fall under the jurisdiction
- of Newfoundland's provincial government. Once proud hunters,
- trappers and fishers of Labrador's interior Barren Lands, the
- natives were relocated to their present home in 1967 with the
- promise of acceptable housing, running water and fishing boats,
- which have yet to appear. "The program made the people dependent
- on government," says Peter Penashue, president of the Innu Nation.
- "For kids growing up, there is no self-esteem, no pride in our
- culture."
- </p>
- <p> "Every time we've talked to the federal and provincial governments,
- our words have fallen on deaf ears," insists George Rich, an
- Innu Nation vice president. Rich says he sniffed gas at 14 and
- went into alcohol rehabilitation after his common-law wife committed
- suicide at 16. Adds Katie Rich (no relation), the first woman
- chief of the five-person Innu band council: "Anything the government
- says no longer surprises me. It's got so I can't cry anymore."
- </p>
- <p> The immediate hope is that federal money, finally earmarked
- last week, will help the nine children who have been evacuated
- get treatment for solvents abuse. Five others, accompanied by
- family members and interpreters, will follow them to a native-run
- facility in Alberta. The Innu band council will also seek a
- treatment center within the village itself. Beyond that, the
- people of Davis Inlet will take up a new government offer for
- eventual relocation on the Labrador mainland, probably at Sango,
- about 11 miles to the west, where there is an ample water supply
- and the possibility of jobs at a $23 million hydroelectric project.
- "There's really nothing worth saving here," says Chief Rich.
- "At least we would have a fresh start, at least at a place chosen
- by us."
- </p>
- <p> Expectations have grown thin in a village that has suffered
- the starvation of hope. Both the federal and provincial governments
- are sending fact-finding missions to the settlement, now that
- the most recent tragedy has put a national spotlight on Davis
- Inlet. But official concern cannot easily lift the air of sadness
- and fatalism in the bedraggled village. Because of a budget
- crunch, Constable Tsnakapesh was laid off for a week along with
- the village's other cop. Tsnakapesh, 24, continued to take police
- calls, though. "I have no authority," he says, "but I've been
- where these kids are now. My parents were both drinkers and
- committed suicide. I was 13 when I pulled their bodies out of
- the water. Later I tried to commit suicide too, because I thought
- I had no life. It's still happening."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-