First Anglican deacon ordained from Slavey people

Published September 17, 2009

The newly ordained Rev. Georgina Bassett

Rev. Georgina Bassett became the first Anglican deacon from the Slavey people when she was ordained on Sept. 6 at St. Andrew’s Anglican Church in Hay River, N.W.T. The Slavey are native people who live mainly south of the Mackenzie River, in communities such as Fort Simpson, Fort Providence, Fort Smith and Hay River.

Ms. Bassett’s ministry will be based at St. Andrew’s, assisting Rev. Vivian Smith, as she has been doing for the past few years. Ms. Smith said that soon after she arrived at the church, she recognized that Ms. Bassett had something special to offer. “Georgina has a heart for God,” she said, as well as “a heart for her people on the reserve. She worries about them, cares about them.”

“I just hope to be an example for others, that no matter what they choose, anything is possible, especially with the Lord’s backing,” said Ms. Bassett. She grew up in the Anglican church, attending on the Hay River Reserve and later in Hay River. She said, however, that she has always struggled with a lack of confidence, which almost prevented her from participating in a lay ministry course five years ago. “I was the only aboriginal,” she said. “…it was rough…being a native child, going to a school where there was a lot of white people. …. I always thought ‘I’m not good enough.'” At the end of the course, the students were asked if they would like to go on to become lay ministers. “I remember reluctantly putting my hand up, not knowing what I was getting into,” she recalls. “The new generation, my children, don’t have that struggle that I have. They grow up to realize that they are just like anybody else, even though they are native.”

Both Rev. Smith and Rev. Bassett work as volunteers in non-stipendairy positions, but Ms. Bassett says now that renovations on St. Andrew’s church are nearly complete, they would like to start saving money to have a paid minister. “For now, we’ll just have to start putting money away,” she says, adding that she thinks she will always be in a non-stipendairy position because she wants to stay in the community.

It has been about 35 years since the Anglican church closed on the reserve after it was damaged in a flood, Ms. Bassett said. She hopes they will be able to raise enough funds to re-build the church.

(Editor’s note: Corrections have been made to this story, first published Sept. 17.)

Author

  • Leigh Anne Williams

    Leigh Anne Williams joined the Anglican Journal in 2008 as a part-time staff writer. She also works as the Canadian correspondent for Publishers Weekly, a New York-based trade magazine for the book publishing. Prior to this, Williams worked as a reporter for the Canadian bureau of TIME Magazine, news editor of Quill & Quire, and a copy editor at The Halifax Herald, The Globe and Mail and The Bay Street Bull.

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