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Michel Trudeau talked of
faith before death
"Its
a personal faith in Christ that saves
no matter what church you go to."
By
Kevin Heinrichs
ChristianWeek staff

DENNIS WALKER
PHOTO
Michel
Trudeau with Makwa shortly after
the two were reunited after an accident in
summer. |
PORTAGE LA
PRAIRIE, MBMichel Trudeau, youngest son
of former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, died
tragically when an avalanche swept him into the
freezing Kokanee Lake November 13. While most remember him as the son of a
prime minister, Dennis Walker remembers him as a
young man wrestling with his faith.
The two met in July under
unusual circumstances in Walkers hometown
of Portage la Prairie, a small city along the
Trans-Canada highway.
Michel Trudeau was driving back
to Ottawa with his dog Makwa, a black
Labrador-Shepherd cross, when a truck broadsided
22-year-old Michels truck, forcing it into
the ditch. After rolling several times, Makwa
leaped from the totalled truck and ran off.
Michel, unhurt, spent almost a week in Portage
searching for his dog.
It was during that time Michel
was befriended by Walker, a local pharmacist. He
had heard about the accident and the lost dog.
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"I visualized a young man
desperate to find his dog companion and stranded without
wheels in a strange city," says Walker. He offered
Michel his old Pontiac to use in his search for Makwa and
later invited Michel to his home for supper.
Walker, an evangelical Christian who
attends a nondenominational church, also invited Michel
to attend a tent evangelistic service with him. Michel
initially refused, saying his cathedral was mountains,
lakes and evergreen trees. Besides, he had not attended
church since he was 13.
"I went on to explain that I
dont believe major life-threatening events in our
lives happen by chance, that God was trying to tell him
something by this accident. I knew where he could hear
Gods message and that was in the tent."
Just before the service began, Michel
changed his mind. "Lets go to the tent,"
he said.
After the one-hour service, he met
several people who said they were praying that God would
help him to find the dog. He later told Walker, "You
know, sometimes I think churches actually get in the way
of people getting right with God, because they think the
church saves them, but actually its a personal
faith in Christ that saves no matter what church you go
to."
Walker agreed, and told him about the
central message of the Christian faith.
Two days later, his dog Makwa walked
out of some bushes into a campground near the town and
the two were soon reunited.
After driving Michel and his dog to the
airport in Winnipeg, Walker gave him a pamphlet that
explained how to get to heaven. Michel promised to read
it.
"What he did with it, I dont
know," says Walker.
Four months later, witnesses who had
been wilderness skiing with Michel in B.C. said the
avalanche swept him 40 metres out in the glacial lake,
wearing a 20-kilogram pack, skis and hiking gear. He
struggled for some time, called for help, then
disappeared. The lake froze over before divers could
recover the body.
But Walker is hoping to see Michel
again.
"I personally believe that a
person can get saved in the final moments of life...like
the thief on the cross," says Walker.
"God spoke to Michel that week in
July. Now hes speaking to all of us, the whole
nation," he says. Quoting Amos 4:12, Walker says the
message is, "Prepare to meet thy God."
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