Crisis line gets double the number of calls for help after Pope’s apology
EDMONTON — People who provide mental health support across the country have been significantly busier helping those with trauma after Pope Francis arrived in Canada and apologized for evil committed by members of the Catholic Church.
“As soon as we set up, before the Pope made his first address on Monday, we had seen about 125 people come to us in Maskwacis,” said Nola Jeffrey, executive director of Tsow-Tun Le Lum Society, a substance abuse and trauma help centre that offers traditional and cultural treatment in Lantzville, B.C.
Jeffrey and her team of elders, survivors and people living with intergenerational trauma were invited by B.C.’s First Nations Health Authority and organizers of the papal visit to come to Alberta to provide support as the Pope apologized, for the first time in Canada, in front of residential school survivors and their families in Maskwacis, Alta., south of Edmonton.
“After (the apology), people just came in droves to us,” Jeffrey said. “We didn’t leave until the last person that wanted help was finished.”