Running toward Reconciliation
Tréchelle Bunn’s passion for sport and community drives her vision for Reconciliation.
Tréchelle Bunn’s passion for sport and community drives her vision for Reconciliation.
Tréchelle Bunn [BA(Hons)/23], proud member of Birdtail Sioux Dakota Nation, started her university career at the University of Calgary, but she had always dreamt of coming back to UM for law school. When COVID happened, she made the decision to transfer to the University of Manitoba and play her last two years of university hockey back home in front of her family and in her community.
“My experience as a student-athlete with UM has been amazing,” said Bunn. “I've been involved in a lot of different initiatives, and I feel as an athlete I was able to use that platform with the Bisons to speak to important issues like how I believe Bison Sport, and other university sports organizations, can use sport as a tool for Reconciliation for athletes and their teams.”
She graduated from the University of Manitoba in the spring of 2023 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in criminology and a minor in Indigenous studies. She is currently in her second year of law school at Robson Hall. She credits UM with being incredibly supportive, encouraging her to uplift her voice to marry together her two passions of sport and academics to create a space for advocacy.
Bunn is also the founder and race director for the Reconciliation Run, which she created as a form of legacy for her grandparents both of whom attended the Birtle Indian Residential School. The Run starts close to the site of the former Residential School, as her grandfather used to tell her all he wanted was to run away from there. This year, the Run has even more meaning for Bunn, as she’s planning to use the funds raised from the race to create The Reconciliation Run Scholarship for Indigenous Student-Athletes.
“I started talking with the Faculty of Kinesiology and Recreation Management, as I eventually want to expand the race so that UM students and faculty can have their own Reconciliation Run,” she said. “As we kept talking, I became aware that there's always so much need for scholarships, especially for Indigenous students. As an Indigenous student-athlete, I was never aware of any scholarships specifically for Bisons athletes, so we identified that as a gap area.”
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