From the BBC:
“Canada: 751 unmarked graves
found at residential school”
An indigenous nation in Canada
says it has found 751 unmarked graves at the site of a former residential
school in Saskatchewan. The Cowessess First Nation said the discovery was
"the most significantly substantial to date in Canada". It comes
weeks after the remains of 215 children were found at a similar residential
school in British Columbia. "This is not a mass grave site. These are
unmarked graves," said Cowessess Chief Cadmus Delorme.
The Marieval Indian Residential
School was operated by the Roman Catholic Church from 1899 to 1997 in the area
where Cowessess is now located in southeastern Saskatchewan. It is not yet
clear if all of the remains are linked to the school. It was one of more than
130 compulsory boarding schools funded by the Canadian government and run by religious
authorities during the 19th and 20th Centuries with the aim of assimilating
indigenous youth. An estimated 6,000 children died while attending these
schools, due in large part to the squalid health conditions inside. Students
were often housed in poorly built, poorly heated, and unsanitary facilities. Physical
and sexual abuse at the hands of school authorities led others to run away. Last
month, the Cowessess began to use ground-penetrating radar to locate unmarked
graves at the cemetery of the Marieval Indian Residential School in
Saskatchewan. Thursday's announcement marked the first phase of the search
efforts. Chief Delorme said there may have been markers for the graves at one
point but that the Roman Catholic church, which oversaw the cemetery, may have
removed them. Cowessess First Nation is "optimistic" that the church
will work with them in investigating further, he said. It has not yet been
determined if all the unmarked graves belong to children, Chief Delorme said.
Technical teams will now work to provide a verified number and identify the
remains, he said. In a statement, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was
"terribly saddened" by the discovery in Saskatchewan. He said it was
"a shameful reminder of the systemic racism, discrimination, and injustice
that Indigenous peoples have faced".
What are residential schools? Between
1863 and 1998, more than 150,000 indigenous children were taken from their
families and placed in these schools throughout Canada. The children were often
not allowed to speak their language or to practice their culture, and many were
mistreated and abused. "They made us believe we didn't have souls,"
said former residential school student Florence Sparvier at a press conference
on Thursday. "They were putting us down as people, so we learned to not
like who we were." A commission launched in 2008 to document the impacts
of this system found that large numbers of indigenous children never returned
to their home communities. The commission's landmark report said the practice
amounted to cultural genocide. In 2008, the Canadian government formally
apologised for the system.
The Roman Catholic church - which
was responsible for the operations of up to 70% of residential schools - has
not yet issued a formal apology. The May discovery of 215 children's remains at
the site of a former residential school in Kamloops has thrown a spotlight
Canada's past policies of forced assimilation. Indigenous leaders expect
similar findings as the search for grave sites continues, aided by new funding
from federal and provincial governments. Cities in the provinces of British
Columbia, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick have cancelled upcoming celebrations
for Canada Day on 1 July in protest, and statues of figures involved with
residential schools, including Canada's first Prime Minister John A Macdonald,
have been vandalised or removed throughout the country.
^ This is beyond words. You hear
about the Residential Schools and know they were wrong and then you hear about
the unmarked graves of the children who died there (215 and 751 found so far)
and can not understand how anyone (a Teacher, a Priest, a Minister or a Government
Official) could ever have allowed this to happen. ^
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