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Former gang member Tania Ross shares her story at Thunder Bay schools

Students at Bishop Gallagher Senior Elementary School gathered for an assembly today to listen to the story of Tania Ross, who was a former member of the Indian Posse gang and spent 20 years in federal prison for first-degree murder.

Since leaving prison, Ross has been on a journey of healing: she now conducts motivational wellness speeches and manages the Blue Turtle Healing Lodge, which helps at-risk youth.

For years, the Thunder Bay Police Service (TBPS) has done presentations to prevent gang recruitment in school-age children. Matt Vis is the media relations coordinator for the TBPS. He explains that speakers like Ross have a lived experience that allows them to “share that perspective with students and really talk to them in a way that police officers can’t.”

Vis explains that presentations like these are about teaching kids to build trust with adults in their lives to become less vulnerable to recruitment into a gang lifestyle.

As the manager of the Blue Turtle Healing Lodge, Tania Ross works with exactly the sort of vulnerable young people that Vis describes. Ross explains that she helps the youth she works with by giving them “unconditional love and no judgement.”

“I don’t talk to them like an authority, like ‘that’s disrespectful, go to time out.’ That doesn’t work for high-risk kids. I give them me. I give them the realness.”

Teaching youth in this way is part of Ross’s healing process, but it’s also a responsibility: “The elders and the old people always say, when you’re taught something, it’s not yours anymore, and you have to give back. This is my way of giving back to Turtle Island, to Canada, to my communities. I love what I do.”

Ross hopes her message gets across “to that youth that’s going through the peer pressure of joining a gang, or coming from a broken home, or just dealing with the things we deal with today… that they’re not alone, and they don’t have to waste their life. They don’t have to go to prison for 20 years to change their life.”

Ross is currently in Thunder Bay to speak to a number of schools in the district over several days.

  • Sam Goldstein is a 2025 graduate of the Seneca Polytechnic journalism program. Sam’s great passions are for history, politics, and food. Born and raised in Toronto, he works as a multimedia journalist in Thunder Bay. You can reach him at goldsteins@radioabl.ca.

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11:47 pm, Apr 25, 2026
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