How a long-fought battle with abuse and addiction led to an extensive social work career
Jack Penashue testifies for 3 days at the Innu inquiry in Sheshatshiu
Jack Penashue of Sheshatshiu says his childhood was filled with hunger and physical violence at the hands of his alcoholic parents.
When his mom and dad weren't drinking, he says, life was momentarily marked by laughter, safety and food.
Penashue spent three days sharing some of the most intimate memories of his life to a room full of people during the Inquiry Respecting the Treatment, Experiences and Outcomes of Innu in the Child Protection System.
On the first day of his testimony, he told the inquiry he wanted to paint a detailed picture of his parents but didn't want to make them out to be terrible people — despite years of abuse, he said, they aren't bad at their core.
Sharing stories from his childhood is a way for Penashue to lay bare the often insidious effects of intergenerational trauma, something he's witnessed through his childhood, his own battles with addiction, and later through an extensive career in social work.
'I hated my parents'
Penashue uses the word "dysfunctional" to describe what his family was like growing up.
When he was seven years old, he says, he was already raising many of his siblings, making their beds, cleaning and cooking when they had food.
His parents emotionally and physically abused their children, Penashue says, and his father had a reputation in the community for being violent.
"We didn't have a very good life," he said. "I didn't love my parents growing up. I hated my parents to the bone."
After a childhood of trauma, Penashue says he eventually succumbed to addiction. He says he remembers the worst of it being marked by endless convulsions, so bad he could barely walk, shower or eat — he lost control of his body.