May - 2006
Community says goodbye to Suzanne Rochon-Burnett
Birchbark Staff
Suzanne Rochon-Burnett, a Metis broadcaster and businesswoman
who's passion for her work and her people earned her both awards
and respect, died in Welland on April 2 at the age of 71.
Rochon-Burnett was born on March 10, 1935 in Ste. Adele near
Montreal. She began her broadcast career in Quebec as host and
producer of a daily women's radio program, then expanded into
print journalism. She eventually moved to Ontario where she developed
the popular radio program Chanson a la Francaise and also worked
for the CBC. In 1997 she became the first Aboriginal woman to
be granted an FM radio broadcasting license by the Canadian Radio-television
and Telecommunications Commission.
Rochon-Burnett was the founding vice-chair of the Metis Nation
of Ontario and was president and founder of Kakekalanicks Inc.
a Native art consulting firm that helped launch the careers of
many Aboriginal artists. She sat on the boards of a number of
organizations including TV Ontario, the Ontario Arts Council
and the Canadian Council of the Arts.
In 1987 Rochon-Burnett was presented with an eagle feather in
recognition of her efforts to save a totem pole carved by Squamish
carver Chief Mathias Joe and in 2001 she received a Meritorious
Service Award in recognition of her contributions to Native Friendship
Centres in Ontario. In 2002 she was inducted into the Order of
Canada and received an honorary doctorate of letters from Brock
University.
In 2004 she received that National Aboriginal Achievement Award
in the media and communications category.
Rochon-Burnett was named to the Order of Ontario, received the
Governor General's Medal, the YWCA's Women of Distinction Award
and the Royal Bank Initiative of the Year Award.
Earlier this year she became the first woman inducted into the
Aboriginal Business Hall of Fame by the Canadian Council of Aborignal
Business.
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