'They're not forgotten': Memorial smudge walk honours lives lost to drug overdose and addiction
Despite the cold, dozens of people gathered in the North Central neighbourhood on Friday afternoon for a smudge walk honouring Saskatchewan lives lost to overdose, addiction and mental illness.
The walk was organized by Pamela Belanger, whose son Vernon died exactly one year ago from a drug overdose. He was 35.
“He was an addict and he was also my son. He was a father, he was a brother and he was a person,” Belanger said. “The stigma that comes with being an addict - he is loved by many other people and [the walk] is just in memory of all the people we lost in 2021.”
Some who gathered held butterfly signs with the names of the people who they are remembering.
Claudette Alexson was there to represent her daughter’s father.
“He passed away on March 3, 2020 when COVID-19 first started,” Alexson said. “He wasn’t really into this kind of lifestyle but in the end, it took him down.”
She said he developed an addiction to painkillers after a back injury. From there, he started using harder drugs.
“[The walk] helps me to feel that we’re all in the same boat. We’ve all lost somebody that we care about,” Alexson said. “Some of us have walked both sides of the street so we know what it’s like and how hard it is to get out of that lifestyle.”
In 2021, Saskatchewan reported a record number of overdose deaths with 464.
Members of the Regina Police Service attended Friday’s smudge walk and said there are ongoing efforts to find solutions to the overdose crisis.
“Nothing has changed with our focus. [Overdose] is still a huge issue in our community,” Dean Rae, the deputy chief of the Regina Police Service, said. “The Regina Police Service continues to work with community partners, continues to work with health, trying to come up with solutions for some of these issues.”
For many participants, raising awareness about the ongoing problem was an important reason to take part in the smudge walk.
Tammy McMillan, an employee with Eagle Heart Centre in Regina and co-organizer of the smudge walk, said the public needs to know there are still problems that need solving in the city.
“I think that the biggest thing for that is bringing awareness to the severity of mental health, the severity of addictions, the severity of homelessness and lots of those go hand in hand,” she said.
Belanger led the walk from the Creeland Mini Mart to the Mamaweyatitan Centre, holding a banner of her son the entire way.
She said she hopes people who took part in the smudge walk, and the community, are reminded of one simple yet powerful message.
“I want the public to know that the many that we lost, they’re not forgotten,” Belanger said.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Brokenhearted husband dies after wife slain in Texas rampage
Fourth-grade teacher Irma Garcia was killed in her Texas classroom on Tuesday, massacred along with her co-teacher and 19 students. Two days later, a family member says her brokenhearted husband died.

'Horrifying experience': 10-year-old boy recounts hiding during deadly Texas school shooting
A 10-year-old boy in a classroom just down the hallway from the room where a gunman killed 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas on Tuesday said the experience of hiding during the shooting was 'terrifying.'
Trudeau signals new gun-control changes coming; here's what the Liberals have promised
In the wake of a horrific mass shooting at an elementary school in Texas, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has signalled that the Canadian government will be moving ahead on new gun-control measures 'in the coming weeks.' In previous Parliaments, the Liberals have made changes to Canada's gun laws, but in the 2021 federal election, Trudeau promised to go further.
Man fatally shot by police near Toronto elementary school after reportedly walking streets with rifle
One man is dead after being shot by police near a Toronto elementary school on Thursday afternoon. The incident sent hundreds of students into lockdown.
Canadian gymnast alleges sexual, emotional abuse by coach
Former Canadian gymnast Abby Pearson Spadafora said on Thursday she had suffered years of abuse at the hands of Olympic coach Dave Brubaker and his wife Elizabeth and called for an independent investigation of the sport.
NRA opens gun convention in Texas after school massacre
The National Rifle Association begins its annual convention in Houston on Friday, and leaders of the powerful gun-rights lobbying group are gearing up to "reflect on" -- and deflect any blame for -- the deadly shooting earlier this week of 19 children and two teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas.
Russia accused of inciting genocide in Ukraine in new report
Russia's actions in Ukraine provide enough evidence to conclude that Moscow is inciting genocide and committing atrocities intended to destroy the Ukrainian people, according to the first independent report into allegations of genocide in that country.
Canadian Blood Service seeks to scrap lifetime ban on sex workers donating blood
Canadian Blood Services wants to scrap a lifetime ban on sex workers giving blood in a further move to make blood donation more equitable. The blood-donation service this month recommended to Health Canada that it abolish the lifetime ban on donation by people who have taken money or drugs in exchange for sex.
Russian plane grounded indefinitely at Toronto Pearson racking up huge parking bill
A massive Russian plane that was grounded at Toronto Pearson International Airport back in February is racking up a substantial parking bill.