Skip to main content

Taking care of our memories

To Fatima, the Walk is a way of honouring the family she’s lost and the memories she still holds of them.

Honouring family and showing support

Fatima Tumang remembers the first time she recognized dementia in her life. As a child, she spent time in the homes of family members living with the disease, watching the way things gradually shifted for them.

At first, these noticeable changes were explained away as signs of aging, but eventually those explanations no longer fit. This experience stayed with her long before she even had a name for it.

In 2014, Fatima organized a group to join the IG Wealth Management Walk for Alzheimer’s for the very first time. What began as a simple effort to bring people together quickly grew into something more meaningful. She poured her heart into raising awareness, even producing segments about the Walk that aired on Philippine television, helping families back home better understand dementia. It was a cause worth showing up for.

Over the years, the Walk took on a greater, personal meaning to Fatima — a way of honouring the family she has lost and the memories she still holds of them.

Fatima Tumang with her family at the 2025 Winnipeg Walk

“I’m walking for them, because they’re not here with us anymore,” she says. “I only have their memories with me.”

Last year, her team walked under the name, “Take Care of Our Memories,” which came from that same place. For Fatima, memory isn’t just a background function of daily life. “It’s the thing that holds people together across distance, time and loss,” she says.

“Our memories deserve to be cherished.”

When the Walk returned in person after the pandemic, she brought her family for the first time. Her kids were young and experienced the whole day at face value — the crowd, the colours, the cheering at the finish line — and watching them take it all in gave her a new way of seeing something she’d been part of for nearly ten years.

“They see everything,” she says. “What feels normal to me is extraordinary to them.”

Fatima wants her children to grow up knowing what it feels like to show up for other people. She hopes they understand that the ability to offer support is something you shouldn’t take for granted because there may be times in life when you’re the one who needs someone walking beside you.

This year, Fatima walks with a renewed purpose. “I walk for my children, whose little hearts already understand how precious memories are,” Fatima said. “And I walk for everyone who knows that memory loss can touch any age, any family, at any moment.”

Fatima and her family are excited to join the 2026 Winnipeg Walk under a new team name, “Little Steps for Memories.” Fatima says their team motto is: “To honour the stories of those we’ve loved. To support families facing memory loss today. To protect the memories our children are still making. To help create a future where fewer memories fade too soon.”

Fatima encourages anyone who hasn’t experienced the Walk before to participate and join over a thousand others in supporting families impacted by dementia. Every donation, every share and every step makes a difference.

Who are you walking for? Join us at Walk events across Manitoba this May & June!