Last summer, a 24-year-old fiddle teacher walked more than 600 kilometres from his home in northern Saskatchewan to the legislature in Regina after a bill to address suicides was voted down a second time. Tristen Durocher set up a teepee camp surrounded by photographs of people who had taken their own lives. He held a 44-day hunger strike—one day for every government legislature member who had voted against the private member’s bill. He called his protest Walking With Our Angels. When he heard that the bill had passed unanimously last month on the third try, he was “speechless and very excited.” “I hope it’s helpful, beneficial and meaningful,” he said in an interview with The Canadian Press this week. Durocher, who is from Air Ronge, Sask., said the support he received during his walk and hunger strike gave him a more optimistic outlook. It showed how communities can come together …