Shannen Koostachin is a real-life role model who will provide inspiration in comics, MP says
A new comic superhero for D-C Comics will take the form of a teenage girl from James Bay. Toronto cartoonist Jeff Lemire says Shannen Koostachin — a young Cree activist from Attawapiskat — helped inspire him.
Lemire said the 15-year-old, who led fellow students to Parliament Hill to lobby for a proper school, isn't far from his thoughts in drawing up the new superhero.
“I think if I can capture some of that heart and some of that essence in this character, perhaps she'll almost be a guiding spirit in the creation of this character,” he said.
He came up with the idea of a Cree superhero because he was fascinated with the culture he saw while visiting Northern Ontario as a child, he said.
Lemire will write the stories and work with an artist on the depiction of the unnamed hero. “This is not just a story that will be told in Canada, these comic books go all over, they go all over the world,” he said.
The MP for the area, Charlie Angus, said there's a huge need for role models and heros who First Nations can look up to. Koostachin is a real-life role model who can speak to them, he said. “This shadow of Shannen, looking down on these youth today, is certainly something that would work within the comic book format,” he said.
Shannen Koostachin was killed in a car crash, in 2010, just before her sixteenth birthday. A new school bearing her name is scheduled to open in Attawapiskat next September. Lemire said the comics should come out sometime next spring.
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A new comic superhero for D-C Comics will take the form of a teenage girl from James Bay. Toronto cartoonist Jeff Lemire says Shannen Koostachin — a young Cree activist from Attawapiskat — helped inspire him.
Lemire said the 15-year-old, who led fellow students to Parliament Hill to lobby for a proper school, isn't far from his thoughts in drawing up the new superhero.
“I think if I can capture some of that heart and some of that essence in this character, perhaps she'll almost be a guiding spirit in the creation of this character,” he said.
He came up with the idea of a Cree superhero because he was fascinated with the culture he saw while visiting Northern Ontario as a child, he said.
Lemire will write the stories and work with an artist on the depiction of the unnamed hero. “This is not just a story that will be told in Canada, these comic books go all over, they go all over the world,” he said.
The MP for the area, Charlie Angus, said there's a huge need for role models and heros who First Nations can look up to. Koostachin is a real-life role model who can speak to them, he said. “This shadow of Shannen, looking down on these youth today, is certainly something that would work within the comic book format,” he said.
Shannen Koostachin was killed in a car crash, in 2010, just before her sixteenth birthday. A new school bearing her name is scheduled to open in Attawapiskat next September. Lemire said the comics should come out sometime next spring.
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About time! My prayers are with Shannen's family, and I hope that children for generation to come will love the school. Keep us informed about the comics's development.
Great to bring brave teens actions in the limelight as everyday accessible role model... Thank you!