Archive for the ‘Northern Canada’ Category

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Heading Into A Busy Fall

October 21, 2010

Quick update:

Congratulations to our 12-year old buddy Wesley Prankard – AND – the community of Attawapiskat!
Pepsi Canada announced the winners of the first round of The Pepsi Refresh Everything Project. (http://www.refresheverything.ca) Because Wes’s idea generated the most votes in his category, He is being awarded $25,000.00 to build a playground in Attawapiskat! TrueNorthAid is proud to partner with this young visionary and Pepsi Canada to benefit the kids in Attawapiskat Ontario.

In related news: A crew from CTV and Pepsi were in Niagara Falls interviewing Wesley and his Mom for a commercial that will air Canada-wide! The Niagara Falls Review did a great job reporting the story. Read it Here.

AND – we’re just nailing down the final details for a return trip to Attawapiskat – this time with a crew from Canada AM. Wesley will be announcing the playground project and at the same time, we’ll be bringing another shipment of food and clothing.

Still on a related topic – Wes is at it again. The Aviva Community Fund is hosting a grant-awarding contest, and guess who has an idea entered? You guessed it! Wes has submitted an idea to build a playground in Kashechewan.
Voting for round 2 begins October 25th. Please consider a vote for him everyday – and - share the link with your friends and family. He needs all the help he can get on this one!

Wesley’s dad Bob is running in the Road2Hope Marathon in support of TrueNorthAid in 16 days. He began blogging about his experience and you canfollow his progress here. Did I mention he only started training two days ago?
Support TrueNorthAid by sponsoring him on his 42km run

The first week of December, we’ll be heading back to Arctic Russia – this time we’ll be accompanied by medical professionals as we visit 3 remote communities.
The details of this trip deserve it’s own post, so look for that in the coming days.

In the meantime, let me just say thank you for your support. We can’t do any of the things we’re doing without your generous financial support. To donate, please click here.

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Update – June 2010

June 29, 2010

Attawapiskat, ON

Late December 2009, we were contacted by a woman in Manitoba trying to send clothes to Attawapiskat Ontario. At the time, I had never heard of the community and so I began to ‘Google’ and e-search it. The stories and articles I read were literally unbelievable. After making contact with some community leaders, I decided to make a trip in to Attawapiskat to see for myself.

I was unprepared for the conditions I saw and experienced. Much of this community was literally living in what can only be described as 3rd world conditions.

We returned in April with 12,000 pounds of aid and are working in cooperation with the band office and 700 Club to establish a foodbank and clothing distribution centre in the community – hopefully by the end of this summer.

We are also now working together with “Your Life Counts” an organization established as an online centre where suicidal kids can get help or have someone just listen. Our partnership will be initially focused on the Ontario coast of James Bay where in the last 16 months, 13 suicides have been reported. Hundreds more have attempted unsuccessfully.

These projects represent a commitment in the millions of dollars – just to launch!

Northern Labrador Coast

Two remote northern communities have approached us requesting help in constructing a Community Centre. Because everything is so expensive to ship in, the with an estimated price-tags begin at  $1,000,000.00 for each of the communities.

Teen suicide is epidemic in these Northern communities. A community centre, with room and programs to facilitate counselling is an urgent need. The centres will also house food and clothing distribution,  addiction counselling and a good social environment where kids, youth and adults can meet.

Laboravaya Russia

We visited Laboravaya Russia after receiving reports of Sasha’s 6 kids being orphaned. We made the trip alongside BPEA in February.

The children are now in another community. TrueNorthAid is supporting them monthly with the cost of their rent. And really – this is where the “rubber meets the road”.  TrueNorthAid’s original vision and mandate was to bring help and hope to remote northern communities. You are helping us do just that! It is only with your help that we can provide a safe home for these kids. Thank you.

Karatayka Russia

We are preparing for an October 2010 trip to Karatayka. The object of this trip is to bring first-aid and hygienic education, training and supplies. Many in this community suffer major complications from minor injuries because they do not have access to medical/first aid attention. We will provide each home with a first aid kit, training by medical professionals, and teaching on the need for good hygienic practices in preventing infection and disease.

While in the region, we will be visiting two other communities – the only viable mode of transportation this time of year is helicopter. And so – by helicopter, the team will visit these three communities bringing potentially life-saving supplies.

Pepsi Refreshes Everything

July 1st Pepsi Canada will launch its “Refreshes Everything” campaign. Wesley Prankard, our 11-year old hero, has submitted a video proposal and we need your help!

After visiting Attawapiskat in April, Wes quickly realized that the community did not have an outdoor playground or recreational facility – he wants to change that. His proposal will be posted on their website at http://refresheverything.ca/ and it is your votes that will win the $25,000.00 grant. Please visit and vote everyday beginning July 1st.

Thank you for your interest, caring and support. We are committed to bringing help and hope to remote northern communities in need – and we can’t do it without your help.
To donate securely online, please follow this link: http://truenorthaid.ca/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=18&Itemid=19

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A True Hero Has Fallen

June 3, 2010

It is an all too rare occasion that one’s life can be impacted so greatly by someone they’ve never met. I can think of only a small handful of such people; most whose names you would immediately recognize.

There is one name among them however that you may or may not immediately know. Shannen Koostachin.

Shannen was killed in a tragic automobile accident this past Sunday night.

Although still a child herself, Shannen was an inspiration to all who knew her, who met her or who heard her passion for justice and equality. Shannen was a fighter – and her fight for a school in Attawapiskat earned her a nomination for the International Children’s Peace Prize.

Shannen’s message was not one of charity. It was about justice.
“…But justice is a higher standard. Africa [Attawapiskat] makes a fool of our idea of justice. It makes a farce of our idea of equality. It mocks our pieties; it doubts our concern; and it questions our commitment.” Bono

On Sunday night, our world became a little bit darker as the bright light that was Shannen’s life was snuffed out all too soon.

But I have to believe that Shannen would expect – and challenge each one of us to light a candle. Light a candle for justice. Light a candle for equality. Light a candle for children’s rights. Light a candle for Shannen.

“There is not enough darkness in all the world to put out the light of even one small candle” Robert Alden

http://www.timminspress.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2606585

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“If You Can’t Feed 100, then feed 1.” Mother Teresa

March 12, 2010

This clip is from one of my favorite movies of all time – Pay it Forward.
Coming home from my trip from Attawapiskat, the needs there completely overwhelmed me. I was haunted by the questions, “What can I do?” and “How can we ever make a difference?”

And then inspiration came. And it came from 2 very unlikely sources.
My 11 year old son Wesley and Rachel’s friend Katie . Two very different people, deeply moved by the conditions they read and heard about in Attawapiskat.

It is so easy to say, “I‘m too young, too far removed, or too broke to do anything!” And yet – these two, just like Trevor in the clip – decided to make a difference.  Perhaps you haven’t realized it yet, but you CAN change your world. It’s possible.
“The realm of possibility exists in each of you.”

True North Aid is preparing to go back to Attawapiskat in a few short weeks. Take the time to read some of the posts about this remote reserve in crisis – and then – do something.

Maybe like Wesley or Katie, you can’t do a lot on your own, but you’ve got a great fundraising idea. On their pages, there is a link that reads, “Become A Fundraiser” – follow that link to set up your own fundraising site and launch your own True North Aid campaign!

Or perhaps you have new or gently used blankets, bedding or clothing. Non-perishable food items are greatly needed. Baby items (food, diapers, clothing)…

When asked about the overwhelming poverty in Calcutta India, and how anyone could make any kind of impact, Mother Teresa replied, “If you can’t feed 100, then feed one.”

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She Needs A Clean, Healthy Living Environment

February 22, 2010


True North Aid director and founder, Rachael McIntyre returned late last night from a humanitarian trip to Arctic Russia.

It sounds like it was an amazing journey, helping not only the orphans in Laboravaya, but many others as well.

Watch this blog for more updates and details on her trip.

In the meantime – As I was going through some of the photos taken in Attawapiskat, Ontario last week, I was reminded of one of the heartbreaking stories I was told.
We entered the house – and in all honesty – it was just ‘more of the same’. The same plywood separating the young family  from the winter cold, the same rotting wood floors, and the same water and mould-stained ceilings.

The man-of-the-house opened a door to a storage room. He explained through my interpreter that he had to empty the room and destroy the contents because of the mould that covered everything.
Looking up, I was shocked to see the amount of black mould and ice crystals forming on the walls and ceiling.

What was even more disturbing was when Rosie, my friend and interpreter, asked the man to show me is daughter’s back. He obliged. Lifting up the back of his one-year-old daughter’s shirt. A large scar became quite evident. As it turns out, she was born with a serious heart condition that required emergency surgery. Released to the care of her parents, the doctor ordered them to make sure she was raised in a clean, healthy living environment.

You could see the pain in this infant’s daddy’s eyes. He knew that for them, a clean, healthy living environment was simply not possible.

His baby is at risk – and there’s not a single thing he can do about it.

BUT TOGETHER WE CAN!

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Meet Gabriel

February 17, 2010

This past Thursday I arrived in Attawapiskat, Ontario. A First Nation reserve situated about 10kms inland along the western shore of James Bay.

My plan as many of you know, was to spend some time with some of the Band and school officials, meet a few local residents, hear their story, take a few pictures and come back and share my findings. Following that, we as an organization would come up with a plan and supply aid.

Well – those plans went out the window once I touched down in Attawapiskat and met Rosie. Rosie is an amazing young mother of four who up until a year ago was the secretary at the high school. During her year long maternity leave she has acted as a volunteer community service worker, receiving and distributing donated goods. She is a champion of her people’s cause.  Her husband Robbie now works as one of two maintenance workers at the homeless shelter –  otherwise known as the “H Trailers” because they are trailers that form the shape of an H.

There are 80 people who live at the H trailers. They are among the ‘fortunate’.

There is an estimated 1,000 people on the reserve who are considered homeless. Those with homes typically share it with several others. Most of the homes I visited were 2 – 3 bedroom houses with 12 to 15 people (adults/teens/children/seniors) living in them.

The houses themselves were dilapidated and, found in any other circumstance, would be condemned.

I visited the shelter along with several homes both Thursday and Friday. Without exception, every story I heard was heart breaking. The gamut of emotions I experienced ran from anger to a deep sadness to sympathy to confusion – and I really above all, understood on a gut-level the deep despair and hopelessness these people have lived with every single day for the last several decades.

I could relay a dozen different stories from Attawapiskat – but instead, I’ll leave you with just one.

Thursday (my first day) was particularly tough on me. I was not prepared for what I saw. I had seen pictures on the internet and read some stories and articles. Even with that, I did not expect to see the level of extreme poverty and unthinkable living conditions that I saw. In the south – we simply would not be permitted to live in those conditions. Social services or Children’s Aid would forcibly take out kids, move us to a shelter and condemn the house. In Attawapiskat their current state is ‘normal’ and has been that way for as long as any of them can remember.

I was physically and emotionally spent after Thursday’s events. I was looking forward to Friday – all that was on the ‘agenda’ was to meet with a couple of school officials, grab a sandwich and catch my flight.

As it turned out – word had spread that True North Aid was on the reserve, and several more people asked me to visit their homes.

The last home I visited Friday belonged to a sixty year old man – Gabriel. He was born with one leg at least a foot shorter than the other. The one bedroom house we visited him in was the same home he was born in.

He opened the door to Rosie and I and in Cree warned us to watch our step. There was a huge hole right inside the door where the wood had rotted. Below, it was easy to see that there was no insulation between the ground and the floor.

The room inside was thick with smoke. So much so that it was difficult to breath. Gabriel was making bannik over an open flame on a coleman-stove type of stovetop. That was the only “appliance” he owned, other than the wood stove he used for heat.

We soon learned that he has been living with no electricity for the past two years. With his disability and age, he is finding it increasingly difficult to cut firewood. So – most times now, Gabriel buys his wood at a cost of $180.00 and if he’s conservative, that will last him a week.

To see at night, he has a kerosene lantern – but because kerosene is so expensive, burns cooking lard in a tin plate.

Not only had his electricity been off, his plumbing hadn’t worked in over two years. Instead of a toilet, he used a bucket in the bathroom that once full, would be emptied outside. (we saw this in more than one home)

The windows were cracked and/or broken – the one in the bedroom had been cardboarded over and draped with a coat because there was no glass.

Standing in Gabriel’s kitchen mid morning, my feet (although in winter boots) became quite cold. I can’t imagine how cold it must get at night when the fire dies down.

The stove pipe was obviously in bad shape, allowing even more smoke to fill the house. Gabriel, although living in extremely poor conditions himself, had taken in a homeless woman who had been living there in this two-room house for the past several months.

Gabriel nor his roommate Susie had any knowledge of the homeless shelter. Before leaving, Rosie was making arrangements for them to move out of their current residence and into the H trailers.

Thank God there were no kids in this home. All of the other homes I visited were filled with children of all ages. None of the homes I saw would in any way be classified as a good situation.

This is a community in crisis – in every sense of the word.

There are some very easy and obvious places to start. The shelter has no cooking utensils, pot/pans, plates, glasses, eating utensils.

There is a large communal eating area – but there are no tables and chairs other than the 3 that were borrowed from the parish hall.

There are 3 tv/rec rooms with no tv’s, furniture or activities (foose-ball, etc)

The shelter has no toys, activities, cribs, highchairs, etc. for babies and toddlers.

There is fulltime security in the H trailers, but have expressed the need for security cameras. Because of the close-quarters and lack of privacy, tempers often run high and violence breaks out. The night I was there, two women got into a fight in the other end of the trailers. No one witnessed it or was able to intervene.

The trailers have one washing machine and no dryers. (hookups are there for more)

On behalf of True North Aid, I committed to help. I made it very clear I had no idea where to start, but promised to help none-the-less.

The people were all very gracious and welcoming. Despite the abject poverty that has become their culture – there was a sense that maybe finally someone has noticed.

I apologize for the length of this entry, but hopefully I’ve been able to give you a slight glimpse into this extremely needy community.

True North Aid has the opportunity to change lives. I am willing to do whatever it takes to bring help and hope to Attiwapiskat.

The work begins now.

Please click on this link and donate now.

Should you wish to donate cribs, toys, clothing, appliances, etc. Please email me at: bob.prankard@truenorthaid.ca

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Will Attawapiskat Be Your Starfish?

January 18, 2010

Just over a week ago, True North Aid was contacted by some people looking for help in a community in Northern Ontario – along the shores of James Bay.

I remembered hearing something about the school there, but other than that I knew very little about Attawapiskat. The more I learned however, the more I knew we had to do something.


View Larger Map

The hardship this reserve has been forced to endure borders on unbelievable. The public school has been closed since the year 2,000 because it sat over a massive underground diesel spill that occurred in 1979. Just this past year, the school building was demolished, leaving many sick, dizzy and suffering other maladies purportedly as a result of the diesel fumes being released.

As if that wasn’t bad enough! There was a huge sewage backup this past year that contaminated a great many homes, leaving over 90 people either homeless or displaced. Although, by law, the reserve was able to declare a state of emergency, the federal government did not recognize it, leaving Attawapiskat alone to evacuate and house those displaced.

I’m sorry, but as a Canadian, I’m appalled at the neglect suffered by my fellow Canadians. It is outrageous to think that an entire community is forced to endure these unbelievable, horrific conditions – in one of the richest countries in the world.
I can’t believe we would allow this in the communities in which we live – why then is it ok for Attawapiskat?

It is said, “charity starts at home”.

In a world where we are bombarded with requests for help – The tragic earthquake in Haiti affecting upwards to 3,000,000 people, unclean drinking water in Africa, extreme poverty in countless third-world countries around the globe, malaria, HIV – where do we even begin? How can we ever hope to make a difference?

In all honesty, True North Aid didn’t go looking for another “project”. Any money that has been raised to date has already been allocated. In fact, in less than a month, we leave for Arctic Russia to help an orphaned family… Attawapiskat is not in the budget.

But the fact remains; Attawapiskat urgently needs your help.

1,000 boxes of clothing and aid have already been collected, but to transport them to Attawapiskat will cost an estimated $5,000.

Can I count on you to get involved?

Your immediate gift of, $5, $10, or whatever you can do, will make a difference. Follow this link to donate securely online now.

Will Attawapiskat be your starfish?

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Goodbye 2009! Hello 2010!

December 31, 2009

I guess it’s only natural this time of year to look back on the year that was – and forward to the year that will be.

As 2010 quickly approaches, the task of bringing help and hope around the Arctic Circle seems almost too big a goal – but then I log on to our Facebook Fanpage and see well over 500 of you engaged and caring about the very same things!

You can show your support in a very visible way either on Facebook or Twitter by adding a “twibbon” to your avatar. It’s easy, free, and even more importantly, helps spread the word about the work True North Aid is doing in and around the Arctic.

Watch this blog for some amazing and creative ways you can make a difference in 2010. Together we can bring help and hope around the Arctic Circle!

Happy New Year!

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Please, Let Me Say Thank You

December 21, 2009

Well, today was yet another day without planes. The weather has been unseasonably warm here on the Northern Labrador Coast, hovering right around the zero degree mark.

The only way to travel out of this community this time of year is by plane – and they’ve been grounded for 3 days due to the fog and freezing rain.

I am very anxious to get home to my family (as I am completely unprepared for Christmas), but at the same time am grateful for the opportunity to see Ray & Juanita Whalen in action.

Yesterday, one of the many calls Ray received was from a young  family. If Ray and Juanita could not help, this man would have had literally nothing for his wife and five kids – no money, no food – until January 5th.

Thank God Ray – and the food supplied by True North Aid - was there. Yesterday I helped deliver enough food to see them through. I met this young family, shook their hands and told them that we are committed to helping Ray and Juanita so people just like them had somewhere to turn. I told them there is a community of people who care. We call this community True North Aid.

I wished you could have been there to receive the words of thanks and gratitude. On their behalf, from the bottom of my heart, please, let me say Thank You.

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Overwhelmed by a Difference-Maker

December 19, 2009

With an extra unplanned day in Northern Labrador, I’ve had some time to digest just how extraordinary the Christmas Giveaway really was and what a difference we can make in peoples lives.

I’ve been staying with Ray and Juanita and am completely overwhelmed at their compassion and generosity. In a word, they are givers.
I don’t think the phone has gone half an hour without ringing – somebody needing something, or just someone to talk to.
Their front door is always being knocked on and their basement is constantly being used for gatherings – be it an A.A. meeting, a counseling session or an informal  time for sandwiches and juice.

I honestly don’t know where they get the energy from, or how they keep going the way they do. What I do know is that they are making a huge difference in the lives of everyone they touch.

Ray told me the story of one of the ladies I met here. Just a year ago, she came to Ray and Juanita an alcoholic on the brink of suicide. After hearing even just part of her history I understood why.
Here was a beautiful young lady who, from as far back as she can remember, suffered unspeakable abuse of every kind.

She came to the door yesterday and proudly announced, “I have been sober for one year and one month!”

This young woman is a shining example of what a life-changing, life-saving difference we can make. With ongoing counselling, support, and a caring couple to encourage her – she is well on her way to recovery.

I am so proud of Ray and Juanita and the amazing work they continue to do here in this Northern Labrador community.

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