“It means a lot to me to be asked to go on this trip,” Kusturok told the B.C. Catholic from Rome. “The main purpose of me being here is to be of service and to support the brave elders through music.”
Kusturok was a familiar figure during the meetings in Rome, often photographed with other fiddlers playing Métis classics like “Big John McNeil” and “The Red River Jig” to showcase their culture. The latter, if played right, has the power to hit “you in the chest and in the heart,” he told media, comparing the jig to the spiritual energy of First Nation round dances at pow wows.
The fiddler said he looks forward to sharing his experience with his newborn son when he grows up and learns about the event in school. He also hopes the music he played contributes to Pope Francis’ commitment to reconciliation with Indigenous people.
Playing before the Pope was “an honour,” Kusturok told The Cold Lake Sun prior to performing. “
The Métis fiddle has the power to move people,” he said. “It’s music that makes you think and that you’ll remember.”
Kusturok said his paternal grandmother was a residential school survivor who kept her own children from experiencing the same ordeal by moving her family around. As a result of their nomadic life his father did not attend school until he was nearly 10.
Although Kusturok does not see himself as a victim of intergenerational trauma, he speculates it might have led to his and his father’s alcoholism.
Kusturok recently celebrated three years of sobriety, while his father has been sober for more than 30 years.
Kusturok grew up going to dances around Manitoba where his mother played the fiddle. As a result he began playing the instrument when he was seven years old.
Although he received his First Communion, he is not a practising Catholic, he said. While the Catholic Church has earned the hostility it receives from some survivors and communities for its role in residential schools, Kusturok said it’s not the faith that’s at fault.
“It’s not the teachings, it’s the flawed people,” he said.
Kusturok was among a secondary group of 32 First Nations, Métis and Inuit people from across Canada who met with Vatican officials. Among these delegates were six Indigenous people sponsored by the Archdiocese of Vancouver.