Trois-Rivires city council votes to change street named for alleged abuser to Atikamekw word - Action News
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Trois-Rivires city council votes to change street named for alleged abuser to Atikamekw word

The city of Trois-Rivires is renaming one of its streets, after victims of an alleged abuser stepped forward, asking that Roger Garceau's name be stripped from the public record.

New name, Awacek, means 'little beings of light' in Atikamekw

Manawan is the largest of the three Atikamekw communities in Quebec. (Ellie M/Wikipedia)

The city of Trois-Rivires is renaming one of its streetsafter victims of an alleged abuser stepped forward, asking that Roger Garceau's name be stripped from the public record.

Trois-Rivires municipal councillor Mariannick Mercure read out a message in Atikamekw at a council meeting this week, as a sign of support for the people hoping to have the street name changed.

Mercure said she hopes the small gesture will help people in Manawan, an Atikamekw community north ofTrois-Rivires,in their path to healing.

"I hope you are able to care for yourselves, and that this gesture, of erasing this man from our collective memory, brings you a small comfort in this storm you are weathering," she said.

Vice-chief of the Manawan Band Council, Sipi Flamand, said this is welcome news before the holidays.

"People in the community feel relieved, but there is still work to do on our end," he said.

The new street name, Awacek, means 'little beings of light,' he explained, adding it was chosen by the alleged victims, to represent children.

"I think this makes a new relationship with Atikamekw people and the city of Trois-Rivires," Flamand said. "This can work toward reconciliation."

Around 20 people in the Atikamekw community filed a lawsuit last summer against the federal government, stating Ottawa turned a blind eye to sexual abuse at an Indian day school in Manawan where Roger Garceau was employed as a teacher in the 1970s.

Flamand said he hopes this will encourage people to be reflective and intentional when it comes to naming places after people, but he is glad city council was willing to listen and make the change.

Municipal councillor Pierre-Luc Fortin strongly supports the change, and said the people who live on the small street in a new development in a residential area have been notified.

Roger-Garceau Street in Trois-Rivires was named for the alleged abuser because that is where he died. (Radio-Canada)

"We felt compassion about the situation," he said. "It was an emotional charge at the beginning, but we felt comfortable with changing it."

"It was important to hear them and to have [the alleged victims] know we received their proposition and our listening was open," he said. "We have to rebuild bridges with them."

Garceau died in Trois-Rivires in 2005. The street was named for him after he served 18 years as regional director of a provincewide seniors federation.

The name change will take effect in the spring.

With reporting by Julia Page