Pope Francis to carry mass at one of Quebec’s basilicas, Indigenous pilgrim site
MONTREAL — The site of the first mass in Quebec during the Pope’s weeklong visit to Canada to make amends with First Nations, Métis and Inuit communities is a renowned pilgrimage destination that merges Indigenous culture and Catholicism.
For more than 300 years, the Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré 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.