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Saskatoon to Batoche run honours Métis war veterans

  • Fraser Needham | July 19, 2014

About 100 runners participated in an event July 18 in honour of Métis war veterans. 

The Road to Peace and Unity run left Saskatoon in the morning and arrived at the Back to Batoche Days Festival site about 11 p.m. on the evening of July 18. 

The total distance traveled was about 100 kilometres. 

Run organizer Shannon Loutitt says all proceeds raised from the run will go toward a monument in honour of Métis war veterans which was unveiled at the Back to Batoche festival on the morning of July 19. 

"I think we’re probably close to $25,000, that just started and is good but the goal definitely for this year is $100,000 for that monument," she says.

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Métis artist Andrea Menard performs at the launch of the Road to Peace and Unity run in Friendship Park in Saskatoon on July 18. Fraser Needham

Vancouver actor Nathaniel Arcand says he found out about the run through fellow artist and friend Andrea Menard and was happy to take part. 

"My late grandfather, he was in one of the wars and he was a veteran, and he passed away a while ago but, you know, I am here to honour him," he says.

Eighty-one-year-old Métis war veteran John McDonald served tours of duty with the Canadian army in the Korean War, Egypt and Germany. 

He says it is nice to see Aboriginal war veterans get the recognition they deserve through events such as this one.

"In all the wars that we participated in, the First Nations and the Métis have got the raw end of the stick."

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Runners leave the start line at the Road to Peace and Unity run at Friendship Park in Saskatoon on July 18. Fraser Needham

Another group of runners also departed Rosthern for the Back to Batoche festival site at 7 p.m. on the evening of July 18. 

The Gabriel Dumont Institute also helped to organize the run.


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