'A long time coming': Edmonton Catholics commit $3.2M to Indigenous reconciliation fund

The Archdiocese of Edmonton will spend $3.2 million on reconciliation initiatives with First Nations, Métis and Inuit people in the Alberta capital region.
The money is part of the Indigenous Reconciliation Fund, a national effort totalling $30 million over five years.
There are five pillars of the plan: healing and reconciliation, youth leadership, culture and language revitalization, education and community building, and dialogues for promoting Indigenous spirituality and culture.
Committee chair Cam Alexis says reconciliation with the church is long overdue.
He is a former Chief of the Alexis Nakota Sioux Nation and former Regional Chief with the Assembly of First Nations.
Alexis believes money can't change the past but initiatives like this can help create a better future.
"It was a long time coming. But you know what? The signal is that we need to move forward and there is some funding provided and that funding will help promote and perhaps offer some healing mechanisms for our people," he told CTV News Edmonton.
Last summer, Pope Francis travelled to Canada, and in Alberta delivered an apology to Indigenous people for the church's role in residential schools and the traumas experienced in them.
Francis followed that up in March by formally rejecting the "Doctrine of Discovery," stating it "did not adequately reflect the equal dignity and rights of Indigenous peoples."
That was a statement many Indigenous people were calling for and one an assistant professor from the Ermineskin Cree Nation called "a humongous symbolic victory."
An Indigenous-led committee has been assembled to award the $3.2 million.
Applications will be accepted for three months on the Catholic Archdiocese of Edmonton website.
With files from CTV News Edmonton's Brittany Ekelund
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

NDP to form majority government following historic Manitoba election
Wab Kinew’s New Democratic Party is projected to have enough seats in the Manitoba Legislature to form a majority government, taking the helm after two consecutive terms of a majority Tory regime.
Parks Canada reveals additional details about deadly bear attack in Banff
The couple and dog mauled and killed by a grizzly bear in the backcountry of Banff National Park late last week did everything right, Parks Canada says.
Parents want arrest after son 'deliberately kicked' in neck during Edmonton hockey game
A Junior C hockey player says he is lucky to be alive after his neck was sliced open by a hockey skate last week in an act his parents believe – and the referee ruled – was an intentional kick.
Canadian condo sales falling amid concerns over interest rate hikes
Amid consistent interest rate hikes and wavering markets, Canadian condo sales are starting to fall in all but two markets in the nation, according to a new report from Re/Max.
Firefighters work until dawn to clear wreckage of bus crash that killed 21 people in Venice
A bus carrying dozens of people plummeted 15 metres from an elevated road in Venice, causing a fiery crash that killed 21 people and injured at least 15, mostly foreign tourists returning to a nearby campsite.
OPINION Some of the key impacts AI is having on our everyday finances
As artificial intelligence continues to evolve, its uses and applications grow even wider. Many people are already using tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google's Bard or Bing Chat to help them write emails, research new subjects and brainstorm business names.
How rate hikes have sparked debate on the causes of inflation and how to fight it
Central banks have been trying their best to convince the public that their interest rate hikes are ultimately for the greater good. But not everyone is buying it.
These are the 5 headlines you should read this morning
Manitoba voters make history, Canada's House of Commons has a new Speaker, and the U.S. House of Representatives ousts its Speaker.
5 people wounded in shooting after homecoming event at Baltimore university
A shooting interrupted a homecoming week celebration at Baltimore's Morgan State University on Tuesday, wounding five people and prompting an hourslong lockdown of the historically Black college.