Charlotte Winters-Fost, grandmother of Burton Winters, named 2020's Indigenous Advocate - Action News
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Charlotte Winters-Fost, grandmother of Burton Winters, named 2020's Indigenous Advocate

Charlotte Winters-Fost, who co-founded First Light in St. John's, was recognized Thursday for over 40 years of advocacy work.

Co-founder of First Light recognized for 4 decades of work

Charlotte Winters-Fost is this year's inaugural recipient of the First Voice Indigenous Advocate Award. (Submitted by First Voice)

A retired teacher from Hopedalewho spoke out passionately about the delayed search for a grandson who perished on sea ice in 2012 and who helped foundone of Newfoundland and Labrador's pre-eminent Indigenous groups is the first recipient of a new award for advocacy.

Charlotte Winters-Fost, 66, was honoured as 2020's advocate by First Voice Urban Indigenous Coalition. She was nominated for more40 years of effortsto advance reconciliation.

"I was just floored, dumbfounded, excited and I even cried," Winters-Fostsaid with a laugh.

She played an instrumental role in the establishment of the St. John's Native Friendship Centre the forerunner of the non-profit organization First Light in 1983. The centreencouraged cross-cultural contact in an urban environment and helped Indigenous people adjust to the city.

"The hope was that what we would offer was a place people could meet and just get to know each other," she said.

Through the decades, the centre has offered women's retreats andfamily camps, and has served as an information hub for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous residents.

"I would like to see peoplecome and get to know usthrough learning about our history as it occurred, not as painted in the colonial paintbrush," she said.

40 years of advocacy

Winters-Fost recalled her childhood in an online acceptance speech Thursday.

The 1950s were "a great time to be a kid growing up in a northern Inuit village," she recalled. "The outdoors was our playground."

Winters-Fost moved to St. John's in the 1970s to pursue a degree at Memorial University. There, she encountered roadblocks and discrimination that later informed her advocacy work.

"It was a good time and a good place back then," she said, but her experiences were sometimes marred by racial commentary,which she says taught her assertiveness.

"I'm better able to respond to overt acts of racism," she said. "For example, if somebody called me names, I can come back with a few choicedescriptive ones as well."

Winters-Fost found a deeper challenge lay in rooting out systemic, often subliminalracism what's been, for her, a lifelong career.

"If somebody has a disdain for you, or makes you feel uncomfortable, or snubs you I mean, how do you react to that?" she said.

"It's taken me a long time to embrace my heritage and stand up and be proud of who I am."

Burton Winters was 14 when he froze to death in 2012. He is believed to have taken a wrong turn when riding home on a snowmobile. (Submitted by the Winters family)

She wasa vocal critic of the province's emergency response after Burton Winters's death, which garnered national attention.

Winters, 14, died after he went snowmobiling on the sea ice outside Makkovik in 2012. The Joint Rescue Coordination Centre waited two daystosend air support to help find him.

The Liberal government said in February that aninquiry into search and rescue responses which has been promised since the party took power in 2015, and which was formally announced in 2018 is forthcoming.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Labrador Morning

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