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Family, friends, dignitaries honour the life of Murray Sinclair at memorial service

The family of the late Murray Sinclair remember his life as being “a beacon of integrity and compassion” as they are joined by members of the public, the Canadian Governor General and prime minister during a commemorative service at Winnipeg’s Canada Life Centre to honour his legacy Sunday afternoon. 

CBC News will be sharing special coverage of Sinclair’s memorial starting at 1:30 p.m. CT.

Murray Sinclair, an Anishinaabe lawyer who was the first Indigenous person appointed as a judge in Manitoba and went on to become chief commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission into residential schools and a senator, died early Monday morning in Winnipeg at the age of 73.

A member of Peguis First Nation, Murray Sinclair was born in 1951, just north of Selkirk on what used to be the St. Peter’s reserve. His spirit name, Mazina Giizhik-iban, translates to “the one who speaks of pictures in the sky” in Anishinaabemowin.

A man with his hands clasped in front of him, stands in a long hallway.
Murray Sinclair poses for a photo outside his Senate office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Sept. 20, 2016. A memorial to the late judge, senator and chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission into residential schools will take place on Sunday afternoon in Winnipeg. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

“To us, our dad was a leader and teacher in our ceremonies; but we also recognize that for innumerable others, he was also a leader in political, business and legal communities. Today’s memorial service is a beautiful celebration of the depth and breadth of another side of his work: his lifelong commitment to human rights and justice, and his relentless pursuit of the truth,” his family said in a statement on Sunday. 

‘Put us on a better path’: Niigaan Sinclair

Speaking at the beginning of the ceremony, Murray Sinclair’s son Niigaan Sinclair said his father cared for people for so long, but Sunday was for those in attendance to care for him. 

“Few people have shaped this country in the way that my father has,” said Niigaan.

“And few people can say they changed the course of this country the way that my father to put us on a better path, all of us, Indigenous, Canadians, newcomers, every person — whether you are new to this place or whether you have been here since time immemorial, from the beginning — all of us have been touched by him in some way.” 

Niigaan also asked those who use Sinclair’s spirit name — Mazina Giizhik-iban — to attach “that small ‘iban’ at the end of his name because that is the recognition that he is now an ancestor.” 

“An ancestor that is doing that work on that side for all of us,” explained Niigaan. “And if you’re able to if you remember, if you could do that work, because when he hears his name, he may be tempted to come back to this side, or may be tempted to look back, or he may be tempted to think about us and feel that we are sad.

“But in our ceremonies it is the most joyous time, because he is going to his relatives.”

Man in a suit stands behind a podium, gesturing with his hand.
Niigaan Sinclair speaks of his father, Murray Sinclair, and of the work he put in to make change for the next generations. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

Niigaan also said had to make a “confession” about being angry at the country for the way it took his father from him and involved him “spending a lifetime dealing with this country’s racism, division, violence and genocidal acts.”

“I’m angry that he was often the lone voice of dignity against a wall of callousness,” said Niigaan. “And that he would work often with leaders who would treat human beings so poorly.” 

Niigaan said he was angry his father didn’t get to do the things he loved to do, like carpentry and that “he missed most of our lives as we gifted him to a country who didn’t always treat him as a gift.” 

However, Niigaan said he made the confession not because he’s “over it,” but because people who are his age and younger have watched their parents “spend their lifetimes fighting racism, and violence and genocide.” 

Niigaan said he knows people were doing that so there would be safe places to live, clean water to drink and languages to speak. As a parent, he can see why his father “did what he did.” 

Murray Sinclair, former senator and chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), smiles while waiting for the swearing-in ceremony for Wab Kinew and his cabinet to begin.
Murray Sinclair is pictured at the swearing-in ceremony for Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew’s NDP government in October 2023. Sinclair, who died Monday, was Manitoba’s first Indigenous judge, led the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and served as a senator. (Prabhjot Singh Lotey/CBC)

He also recalled speaking to his father in the hospital, who kept reminding him to take care of himself. 

But even through the hard times his father experienced on the road or by remembering the stories that were told to him, Niigaan said his father’s answer about why he spent so much time pouring himself into his work was simple.

“You know what he told me? He said just simply, ‘I was called.'”

Governor General, prime minister speak 

Mary Simon, Canada’s first Inuk Governor General, told CBC Sinclair led Canada with kindness and in a forward-looking way that gave people hope — one of the many reasons she enjoyed working with him. 

“I think he paved the way for many of the things that we’re dealing with today and he uncovered a lot of injustices in the system that had to be revealed in order to, you know, work and fix issues that have affected Indigenous people so much,” she said. 

Simon remembers Sinclair giving her a hug and saying she “was going to be alright” after she got emotional while telling her residential school story during a Truth and Reconciliation Commission event in Edmonton. 

She also had the privilege to invest Sinclair as Companion of the Order of Canada for his life’s work two years ago. 

During her speech Sunday, Simon said Sinclair had a “heart brave enough to expose injustices, yet generous enough to make everyone around him feel welcome and important.” 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recalled meeting Sinclair nine years ago, when he was about a month into his job and “very much feeling the weight of responsibility Canadians had entrusted him.” 

That day was the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report, Trudeau told those in attendance. 

The prime minister also said over the years Sinclair became a wise teacher, trusted confidant, insightful elder and a friend who always challenged him to do better. 

“He knew that progress is only made when you meet people where they’re at and bring them along,” he said. “When you encourage them to open their mind, think critically and ask tough questions about who we are.

“That’s what Murray believed, that’s who Murray was,” Trudeau said. 

National commemorative ceremony

Earlier this week, the province and federal government announced plans for the service — the first national commemorative ceremony honouring an Indigenous leader — which began at the downtown Winnipeg arena starting at around 2 p.m. CT. 

The service also included musical performances by Red River Métis fiddler Morgan Grace, singer-songwriter William Prince from Peguis First Nation, Cree and Salish musician Fawn Wood and Oji-Cree singer-songwriter Aysanabee.

Murray Sinclair was laid to rest on Thursday and given full Midewiwin funerary rites as the Western Doorway Chief and Road Chief of the Three Fires Midewiwin Lodge, his family’s statement said. 

“He called upon us to be kind to one another; to support young people in their search to know who they are and where they come from; and to believe in truth and justice. As we carry his memory forward, we are humbled by the love and respect shown to him, and we thank all who have honoured his legacy with us,” Sinclair’s family said. 

Murray Sinclair served as the co-commissioner of Manitoba’s 1988 Aboriginal Justice Inquiry, which highlighted the need to take Indigenous offenders’ history into account when sentencing.

Profile of a man smiling in a crowd.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau listens to speakers at a commemorative service for the late Murray Sinclair on Sunday. (True North Sports and Entertainment)

Marie Wilson, who served as one of the co-commissioners of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission with Murray Sinclair, said Canada doesn’t have a long history of recognizing Indigenous greatness, but she thinks it’s extraordinary that Sinclair is being properly honoured in a way that the whole country can become aware of his legacy. 

“I’m not afraid that if we lose Murray there’ll be a big hole that no one else will fill. What I think is important to remember about his extraordinary life and professional contributions is that he was the first in so many areas, but that doesn’t mean he’ll be the last,” Wilson said at the Canada Life Centre. 

Senator Marilou McPhedran said she’s heard Sinclair say, on many occasions, to pick one of the 94 TRC calls to action and “do whatever you can as an individual to make that happen for all of Canada.”

“I think that underscored for many of us that we do need to work collectively, but we also need to commit on an individual level and this makes it possible,” McPhedran said at the arena before the service began. 

A crowd in a room in front of a stage with a portrait, flags, flowers.
Family, friends, dignitaries and members of the public were invited to Canada Life Centre in Winnipeg for a commemorative service in honour of Murray Sinclair on Sunday, Nov. 10, 2024. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Ry Moran, who was founding director for the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation, said he cherished listening to Sinclair during Truth and Reconciliation Commission events where commissioners would hear “heartbreaking content” and the “painful truths” of residential school survivors. 

“Murray had this incredible ability to stand up and to make something beautiful out of all of that pain that we heard —  something inspiring, something that filled every single person in that room with a profound sense of hope and optimism that we can indeed overcome these massive historical wrongs,” Moran said during an interview with CBC. 

Books of condolences will be available for people to sign at the memorial. A book of condolences has also been made available to sign at the Manitoba Legislative Building, where it can be signed until 8 p.m. Sunday. 

Flags at the legislative building in Winnipeg and Parliament building in Ottawa will remain at half-mast until after the memorial on Sunday.

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