As you know, a lot of the intergenerational trauma has had a terrible effect in terms of people without parenting, with residential schools and with children being apprehended and taken out of their language and culture. Everything we're trying to do now is to make sure that if the mom needs some help, there's someone in the community—that healthy auntie, a healthy grandparent—who can do wraparound care while mom gets some help and we don't take that child out of the community.
We also know that in the wonderful summit Minister Hajdu had just after Parliament resumed—the indigenous mental wellness summit—it was inspiring to see all of these indigenous-led programs that people know are working. It's very important that we are supporting indigenous ways of knowing and doing, whether it's on the land or whether it's on the importance of language and culture—all of those things, I think—and it's also the fact that within our school systems it has to be led that way.