- Ways to give
- Where to give
- News & impact stories
- Engage Magazine
- Engage: Summer 2025
- Message from the Vice-President, Advancement and Alumni Engagement
- Meet Alison Shaw, Executive Director, SFU Climate Innovation
- Protecting Canada’s aquatic ecosystems
- Red Leafs swim star propelled by donor support
- Creating space for women to thrive in STEM
- Continuing a legacy of artistic innovation
- Going the extra mile: Sue Porter
- Going the extra mile: Kris Nordgren
- Going the extra mile: Barbara Mitchell & Andrew Wister
- How to plan to reduce taxes on your estate: Part three in a three-part series
- Chasing a dream
- Engage: Winter 2024
- Message from the Vice-President, Advancement and Alumni Engagement
- Improving avalanche safety for backcountry adventurers
- Meet Dr. David J. Price
- Archive of beloved CBC show Writers & Company comes to SFU
- Alumnus succeeds courtside with donor support
- More than 42 million thanks!
- Following a different path
- How to plan to reduce taxes on your estate: Part two in a two-part series
- SFU's endowment
- Engage: Summer 2024
- Message from the Vice-President, Advancement and Alumni Engagement
- People of SFU: Meet Annette Santos
- Supporting land-based learning for Indigenous business students
- New award nurtures artists to push creative limits
- Meet the physicians helping lead the journey to B.C.’s new medical school
- Bridging continents for critical international climate research
- Addressing the urgent human health impacts of B.C. wildfires
- Uplifting students in need
- Preserving Vancouver’s community-engaged art history
- Fostering global perspective: A Q&A about paying it forward with alumnus Allan Merrill
- Raising the bar to improve food security for students
- Meet SFU’s 2024 Outstanding Alumni Award recipients
- SFU news and research
- The bold and the Bard
- Inspiring future leaders: a charter alumnus’ legacy
- How to plan to reduce taxes on your estate: Part one in a three-part series
- Gibson Art Museum construction progresses; design earns national recognition
- In Memoriam: Cathy Daminato
- By the numbers
- Engage: Winter 2023
- Message from the Vice-President, Advancement and Alumni Engagement
- People of SFU: Meet Erin Biddlecombe, Senior Director, Student Affairs
- Doing good
- Making dreams come true: One couple's investment in our future
- Five questions to ask when planning a charitable gift in your will
- Healthy food for healthy minds
- Supporting Indigenous and Black scientists
- Part of the bigger picture
- Bridging human connection in the world of immersive technologies
- Bringing equity into the health promotion space
- Transforming the future of cancer
- The singing janitor
- SFU news and research
- Building community and compassion through coffee
- SFU’s endowment: advancing an inclusive and sustainable future
- Message from the Vice-President, Finance and Administration
- Thank you for your impact!
- Engage: Summer 2023
- Message from the Vice-President, Advancement & Alumni Engagement
- People of SFU: Meet Chris (Syeta’xtn) Lewis, Director of Indigenous Initiatives and Reconciliation
- The first graduates of SFU
- By the numbers: investing in the future
- SFU donor community helps student-athlete run through adversity
- Supporting students in hard times
- Through their words: Mathew Fleury
- Through their words: Ashley Kyne
- Through their words: Kali Stierle
- Through their words: Julie Seal
- Strengthening legal services excellence in B.C.
- Coming to SFU: an innovative new hub for the arts
- The power of reciprocity: A Q&A with Ian and Yvonne Reddy
- Transforming Indigenous art education at SFU
- Embracing the SFU student experience
- When charity truly begins at home
- Shaping a more inclusive future in tech
- Propelling diversity and innovation in higher education
- SFU news and research
- Achieving your philanthropic goals with stock options
- In memoriam: Ron Cliff
- Engage: Summer 2025
- Impact of giving
- Engage Magazine
- About us
- Give now
Through their words: Mathew Fleury
Mathew Fleury is currently working towards his PhD in health sciences. Mathew is a Nēhiyawak (Plains Cree) and proud member of one of the founding families of the Métis Nation, where he has deep roots in Manitoba’s Red River Valley. He draws on his own lived, academic and professional experiences to apply grassroots approaches in research and policy to issues impacting Indigenous peoples, including HIV/AIDS, harm reduction, mental health, and accessibility.
Mathew works as a research and knowledge exchange manager at the First Nations Health Authority. In addition to teaching at North Island College and the University of British Columbia, he is also an adjunct professor at SFU and a research associate at the BC Centre for Disease Control. He is a recipient of the Biagioni Indigenous Graduate Entrance Scholarship.
In Mathew’s words:
As an interdisciplinary health scientist, community-based researcher, activist, artist and storyteller with lived and living experiences as a neurodivergent, queer, and Two-Spirited individual, I am incredibly passionate about the intersections between activism, community and science, and using that knowledge to advance inclusion and human rights.
I come from a long line of Indigenous leaders on both sides of my family, and so having a strong sense of social justice is an innate thing for me—I’ve always had a deep longing to address and fix what doesn’t feel right. I especially received so much mentorship from the Indigenous women in my life, the backbones of our community. My research now focuses on illuminating the efforts that communities are undertaking towards public health sovereignty. I aim to draw parallels between Indigenous methodologies, queer theory, and 'hard' science to examine the scientific and sociopolitical impacts of HIV/AIDS on Indigenous peoples.
When I think about how many Indigenous health scientists are out there and how many Indigenous students can see themselves reflected in that space—that’s what motivates me to do this work. I am someone who has the opportunity to occupy that space, to be socially engaged, and to also build capacity for the next generation of Indigenous scientists. I also want to show people that Western and Indigenous science can actually coexist, and that Indigenous science is still science.
The Biagioni Indigenous Graduate Entrance Scholarship has allowed me to pursue my PhD without financial barriers, and I am immensely grateful to the Biagioni family for their ongoing generosity and kindness. They’ve really inspired me and shown me what it means to be a philanthropist, and I hope that one day I’ll get to do something just like that.
"When I think about how many Indigenous health scientists are out there and how many Indigenous students can see themselves reflected in that space—that’s what motivates me to do this work."
In honour of National Indigenous History Month, we asked four students and alumni to share their perspectives, as well as reflect on their SFU experience, the impact of donor funding on their studies, and their hopes for the future. Advancement & Alumni Engagement (AAE) sat down with Kali Stierle, a BBA student in accounting; Ashley Kyne, a master’s student in criminology; Mathew Fleury, a doctoral student in health sciences; and Julie Seal, an SFU alumnus, to tell their stories.