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Breaking bannock on city streets.


ON A WARMISH Saturday morning in October, Rev. Andrew Wesley walks along one of Toronto's major thoroughfares, Bloor Street, carrying a plastic container of blueberries and a bag of flatbread. While most city dwellers are just beginning to enjoy the start of the weekend, Mr. Wesley is heading for his constituents--a group of aboriginal people who live in Bedford Park Bedford Park is the name of several places around the world:
  • In Australia:
  • Bedford Park, South Australia, a suburb of Adelaide
  • In Canada:
 just across from the University of Toronto's football field.

The flatbread is bannock Bannock (băn`ək), Native North Americans who formerly ranged over wide territory of the N Great Plains and into the foothills of the Rocky Mts. They were concentrated in S Idaho. , a traditional Indian bread Indian bread
n.
Any of various plants, such as the breadroot, having edible parts used by certain Native American peoples for food.
 that is a taste of home for the people he would be meeting. He and a visitor are greeted in a friendly manner. Most of the group have just come from breakfast at a social centre. Their names are Eric, Marcel Marcel

the fast ebbing of time impels him to devote his life to recording it. [Fr. Lit.: Proust Remembrance of Things Past]

See : Time
, Noreen, Joe, Jim, and some bear the marks of hard living--cuts, scars, missing teeth, a swollen eye--but not all do.

Mr. Wesley moves around to various members of the group, talking quietly one-on-one. The talk ranges over a story of jail--"I got bugs from a blanket from this jail in Guelph once"--to the question of where they will go when winter sets in. Shelters are all right, says Joe, "but they have rules there, like no drinking, no cursing, no fighting, and we like to do all that stuff." A latecomer late·com·er  
n.
1. One that arrives late: waited for the latecomers to be seated.

2. A recent arrival, participant, or convert:
 joins the group with the words, "I'm under house arrest." "So what are you doing here, man?" asks Noreen. No reply and the newcomer sits down, pulls out a bottle of mouthwash mouthwash /mouth·wash/ (mouth´wosh) a solution for rinsing the mouth.

mouth·wash
n.
A medicated liquid for cleaning the mouth and treating diseased mucous membranes.
, opens it up and takes a gulp An unspecified number of bytes. . He is not freshening his breath. Mouthwash can contain as much as 27 per cent alcohol and at about $2, it is a cheap, though gut-churning, high. Another member of the group takes out a mickey of Southern Comfort.

Eric leans over to say that he is Sioux and Blackfoot, from near the North Dakota North Dakota, state in the N central United States. It is bordered by Minnesota, across the Red River of the North (E), South Dakota (S), Montana (W), and the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba (N).  border. The talk turns toward attempts to find work. One man mentions roofing jobs. Joe hands a visitor a book, a copy of the New Testament. "My girlfriend gave it to me. She's a Christian," he says.

After spending an hour or so with the group, having distributed the blueberries and bannock, Mr. Wesley says good-bye. "Hey, next time bring some Klik KLIK is an AM radio station in Jefferson City, Missouri. KLIK is owned and operated by Cumulus Media and transmits at 1240 KHz at 1000 watts of power 24 hours a day. ," says Marcel, referring to a canned meat popular in many northern communities. Mr. Wesley, who is Cree and who grew up in northern Ontario Northern Ontario is the part of the province of Ontario which lies north of Lake Huron (including Georgian Bay), the French River and Lake Nipissing.

Northern Ontario has a land area of 802,000 km² (310,000 mi²) and constitutes 87% of the land area of Ontario, although it
, laughs.

These Saturday morning "walkabouts," as Mr. Wesley calls them, are part of a recent commitment by the diocese of Toronto to minister to some of the approximately 60,000 aboriginal people in the city. Mr. Wesley divides his time between the downtown Church of the Redeemer, known for its social justice activities, and the Toronto Urban Native Ministry office housed in an aboriginal service agency called Council Fire Native Cultural Centre.

He is counseling two members of the Bedford Park group, most of whom, he says, come from family backgrounds of alcohol abuse and violence. Help for alcohol addiction, guidance for job training and social services social services
Noun, pl

welfare services provided by local authorities or a state agency for people with particular social needs

social services nplservicios mpl sociales 
, leading worship services in native language are some of the activities Mr. Wesley pursues. Two members of the group went to church-run residential schools, a system widely publicized pub·li·cize  
tr.v. pub·li·cized, pub·li·ciz·ing, pub·li·ciz·es
To give publicity to.

Adj. 1. publicized - made known; especially made widely known
publicised
 in recent years because of the abuse experienced by students in some of the schools. "I talk about forgiving and carrying on with life. I have dealt with my pain and arrived at forgiveness. I tell them I did it and so can you," says Mr. Wesley, who also attended a residential school.

He is starting to see a few success stories, he says. One man returned to his native community from a life on the streets in Toronto. "He went home. Life is better for him. I heard from him last week. He went moose hunting. He said he misses Toronto but likes where he is," Mr. Wesley says.

Archbishop Terence Finlay, formerly the bishop of Toronto, says that in 2000, as stories of the residential schools came to light, the diocese held a "healing circle" meeting to hear natives talk about their experiences in the schools. One of the organizers, Frances Saunderson, "challenged the diocese to do something and find and develop an aboriginal priest who would guide us in this," says Archbishop Finlay. Mr. Wesley, he says, "has a real passion for this ministry and is helping native and non-native people to understand each other. He has a foot in both camps and the ability to be a bridge-builder."

Mr. Wesley's work includes meetings at native centres, jail and hospital visits, baptismal and funeral services funeral service nmisa de cuerpo presente

funeral service nservice m funèbre

funeral service funeral n
, interpreting at court, and making presentations to native and mixed groups on such native experiences as residential schools, racism and spirituality. In the area of bridge-building, he is currently organizing a conference where clergy will be able to listen to the stories of native street people, "what happened in their life, how they ended up on the street."

While some might find street work bleak, Mr. Wesley says that for him it is "almost like a dream come true ... I like what I am doing and it has helped me with my residential school years, when I was abused. It's become a blessing."

Five of the Bedford Park people come to Redeemer's soup kitchen and Mr. Wesley says he wants to build a healing group with them. "Not really an AA (Alcoholics Anonymous Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), worldwide organization dedicated to the treatment of alcoholics; founded 1935 by two alcoholics, one a New York broker, the other an Ohio physician. ) group, but a circle, just to talk," he says.

Some native people who have had negative church experiences are hostile to his ministry. "One time, we got abuse at the door for saying we were church people. Many times, people will walk out when you mention Christ, but you just have to be strong," he says.

His bridge-building extends to Scripture, he says. "When I teach the gospel of the day, I cross it with native teaching. For instance, Romans 12 talks about the various gifts each person can have. I use the teepee poles to teach it. Each pole represents a gift," he says.

Ordained or·dain  
tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains
1.
a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on.

b. To authorize as a rabbi.

2.
 in 2003, Mr. Wesley says he is "very strongly rooted" in his aboriginal traditions but that he also "comes with Christ behind (him)" when he works with native people.

"I find these (street) people are very spiritual. If we talk about sin, they know it," he says.
COPYRIGHT 2004 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Urban Native Ministry
Author:De Santis, Solange
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Dec 1, 2004
Words:1040
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