Incarcerated women learning how to be better moms from behind bars
Posted May 23, 2023 11:10 am.
Last Updated May 23, 2023 1:18 pm.
Some of Canadaās most notorious criminals called the Grand Valley Institution for Women home. But the focus here isnāt just on punishment, itās also on rehabilitation.
And for some of the women, that means learning how to be a better mom.
On any given day, there are 700 women in Canadaās prisons. They are women who have been convicted of their crimes and are sentenced to two or more years. About two-thirds of these women are mothers.
Itās not easy parenting a child from behind the wall of a prison, but itās even harder growing up with a mom behind bars.
āSo, if I didnāt have my kids, if I didnāt have my boy or my girl, I would be okay with being in here because then I wouldnāt have anyone to go home to. I wouldnāt have anyone waiting for me. They were so young,ā said Faith Linklater who has been behind bars since 2018.
Patrice Butts coordinates the mother-child program at Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener. She aims to keep families connected and break the cycle of criminality by helping inmates be moms.
āMore often than not when we sentence a woman, we sentence a child or children. And we need to think about how to manage and do that differently ⦠so that these kids are not filling the jails of the future,ā said Butts.
Butts and the women she helps allowed Citytv to sit in on one of their group sessions where they focus on just being moms.
āI donāt know what to expect. I was scared to leave my kids. I was scared to be away from them for so many years as well and try to find ways I can still be there,ā said one inmate, Brittany Crozier.
Crozier is currently serving a 12-year sentence for drug trafficking. Her two young children are being raised by Crozierās dad. Itās a familiar situation as a Crozier herself grew up with a mom in and out of jail.
āMy upbringing in that crime cycle. I wanted nothing to do with,ā explained Crozier. āAnd even though Iām in this place, itās still a lesson and itās a bump Iām going to overcome and make me even better.ā
During the group session, Butts asks Crozier about what her children understand about her not being there and the impact on them.
āMy son, whoās seven, he understands Iām in prison. He doesnāt know why Iām here. I think heās still too young to know Iām here. āÆHe always says, Oh, stop lying to me. Just tell me. Iām like, When I come out, youāre going to be older. Iāll sit down and talk to you then,ā shared Crozier during the session. āSome days he does get upset and thinks Iām lying.ā
Tabitha Eliot, another inmate, is dealing with her pre-teen son being raised in foster care.
āI think just because I committed a crime doesnāt mean that Iām not a mother. You know, like Iām a mother from the time that my son was born. And Iām always going to be,ā said Eliot. āYeah, Iāve made a few mistakes, but hopefully, my sonās learning from mine instead of having to go and learn them the hard way.ā
āWeāre all mothers still. We always will be inside the fence or out.ā
āHaving that connection with our children, thatās part of our correctional plan. And itās part of my correctional plan. Right. And how am I day to day? Iām going to react to how Iām going to live. How I spend my time and itās just as important to him,ā added Faye Higgins, convicted of murdering a man she claims sexually abused a young child.
āMy son wants me to come home. He always asks me every time we talk. When are you going to come home?,ā said Faith Linklater, currently serving a life sentence for second degree murder and attempted murder.
āI donāt have a date to tell them, I canāt say āOh, Iām coming home June 2nd, 2028,ā You know, I canāt say that. I can say I go for parole in two years, but if I donāt get it, I go for parole two more years, and after that every second year. And it hurts,ā said Linklater.
āThey need their mom to raise them. Right now, my only contact is through video calls and the phone.ā
Maintaining that critical connection is difficult. Thatās why twenty years ago, the government formally launched the Mother-Child Program, where women can be with their kids every day.
A new documentary will explore the mothers who are raising their children inside the prison walls. Watch āVeraCity: Prison Momsā on Sunday, May 28 at 10 p.m./9 p.m. CT only on Citytv.