Indigenous leaders, Echaquan family call on Quebec to recognize systemic racism
MONTREAL — Atikamekw leaders and Joyce Echaquan’s family called on the Quebec government Tuesday to recognize systemic racism in the health-care system and adopt the Atikamekw community’s solutions to reducing inequities faced by Indigenous patients.
They testified during the last week of the coroner’s inquest investigating the death of Echaquan, a 37-year-old Atikamekw mother of seven, who filmed herself on Facebook Live as a nurse and an orderly were heard making derogatory comments toward her shortly before her death last September at a hospital northeast of Montreal.
Paul-Émile Ottawa, chief of the Conseil des Atikamekw de Manawan, said her passing has left an open wound in the community, located about 250 kilometres north of Montreal. Ottawa told coroner Géhane Kamel that Echaquan’s death exacerbated the fears of a people already reluctant to seek care at Quebec hospitals.
“On some level, we all feel guilty for being unable to act so that Joyce could be saved,” Ottawa said. “It was a huge trauma for everyone, even today … the fear that it’ll happen again.”


