From the CBC:
“Your questions answered about
Canada's residential school system”
The discovery of what is believed
to be the remains of 215 children at the site of a former residential school in
Kamloops, B.C., has stunned Canadians and renewed focus on what Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau called a "dark and shameful chapter of our country's
history." It is also another reminder for Indigenous peoples living in
Canada of a painful history they've known about all along. The Tk'emlúps te
Secwépemc First Nation said last week that preliminary findings from a ground-penetrating
radar survey at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School detected the
remains, a confirmation of what the community already understood from oral
history. Since the news broke, CBC
readers have reached out with questions about Canada's residential school
system and its aftermath. Below are answers to some of your questions.
How many children were forced
to attend these schools? More than 150,000 First Nations, Métis and Inuit
children were forced to attend church-run, government-funded schools between
the 1870s and 1997. An amendment to the Indian Act in 1894 made
attendance at residential schools compulsory. Children were removed from their
families and culture and forced to learn English, embrace Christianity and
adopt the customs of the country's white majority. The National Centre
for Truth and Reconciliation examining residential schools has identified the
names of, or information about, more than 4,100 children who died while
attending these schools, most due to malnourishment or disease. Former senator
Murray Sinclair, who chaired the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)
examining residential schools, has said he believes the death count could be
much higher because of the schools' poor burial records.
How many schools were there?
Where are they? The Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement (IRSSA)
has recognized 139 residential schools across Canada. However, this number
excludes schools that operated without federal support, such as those run
solely by religious orders or provincial governments. The 139 schools
operated in all Canadian provinces and territories except Prince Edward Island,
New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador. (There were residential schools in
N.L., but they weren't included in the IRSSA.) In 1931, at the peak of
the residential school system, there were about 80 schools operating in the
country. The last one to close,
in 1997, was Kivalliq Hall in Rankin Inlet, in what's now Nunavut. (It only
became a IRSSA-recognized school in 2019, which is why earlier accounts describe
the last school closing in 1996.)
Who is being held accountable?
Many of the children at residential schools were physically, sexually or
psychologically abused in a system described by the TRC in its landmark 2015
report as cultural genocide. In 2008, Prime Minister Stephen Harper
delivered a formal apology in the House of Commons on behalf of the government
of Canada over residential schools and the damage they did to Indigenous
people. The apology came nine months after the Indian Residential Schools
Settlement Agreement took effect. The comprehensive class-action settlement —
which involved survivors, the federal government and churches that ran the
schools — included the establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission. It also included financial compensation, which took two
forms: a common experience payment for all students who attended the schools,
and an independent assessment process to adjudicate claims from students who
had suffered abuse at the schools. More than $3 billion has been paid to
28,000 victims of residential school abuse, according to a report released this
past March.
What has the Vatican said or
done about this? The Catholic Church operated roughly 70 per cent of
Canada's residential schools, including the Kamloops residential school from
1890 to 1969 before it was taken over by the federal government to serve as a
local day school until 1978. While other churches, like the Anglican and
United churches, have formally apologized for their roles in the residential school
system, the Catholic Church has so far refused to do the same. The
closest it came was in 2009, when Pope Benedict XVI expressed
"sorrow" for some of the "deplorable" conduct of church
members. In 2018, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops said Pope Francis
"felt that he could not personally respond" to the request for an
apology for residential schools. However, many individual Catholic
church leaders in Canada have made apologies, both before and after the
discovery in Kamloops. The Catholic Church has also refused to release
many of its residential school documents, which could shed light on unmarked
burial sites, citing privacy laws. Meanwhile, NDP MP Charlie Angus, the
party's critic for Indigenous youth, says the church has dodged paying
survivors compensation. As part of the IRSSA, Catholic groups were
required to pay tens of millions of dollars — $29 million in cash to the
now-defunct Aboriginal Healing Foundation, $25 million in "in-kind"
services, and to use their "best efforts" to fundraise $25 million
for healing programs. However, a controversial court ruling in 2015 let the
groups off the hook after they raised only about $4 million of the $25-million
goal.
Is there an inquiry? The
TRC released 94 calls to action in its landmark 2015 report, including a
section on missing children and burial grounds. It called on the federal
government to work with churches, Indigenous communities and former students
"to establish and maintain an online registry of residential school
cemeteries, including, where possible, plot maps showing the location of
deceased residential school children." Crown-Indigenous Relations
Minister Carolyn Bennett said Wednesday the government already earmarked some
$33 million in its 2019 budget to implement the TRC's burial-related
recommendations. However, little of that money has been spent so far,
with $27 million still available. Bennett said the money "will be
distributed on an urgent basis" in partnership with the Winnipeg-based
National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation and Indigenous communities that
have site searches planned or underway.
Are other schools being
investigated now? The TRC concluded in its 2015 report that the bodies of
the majority of students who died at the schools were not returned to their
home communities. The commission has records of 51 children dying at
Kamloops Indian Residential School. In light of the recent discovery, Trudeau
has pledged federal support in preserving grave sites and uncovering
potentially more unmarked burial grounds at other former residential schools.
However, he and his ministers have stressed the need for Indigenous
communities to decide for themselves how they want to proceed. Indigenous
Services Minister Marc Miller said Wednesday that Ottawa is "walking at
the pace of communities" and is intent on developing culturally
appropriate protocols to honour the lost children.
Where are the leaders of these
schools now? The University of British Columbia said this week it is
reviewing an honorary degree given to the now-deceased Catholic bishop, John
Fergus O'Grady, who served as principal of the former Kamloops residential
school. The discovery in Kamloops has also increased calls across Canada
for cities and institutions to rescind honours given to those who were involved
in setting up the residential school system. In P.E.I., a statue of John
A. Macdonald, Canada's first prime minister, was removed following a vote by
Charlottetown city council. Toronto's Ryerson University is being urged
to change its name and remove a statue of Egerton Ryerson from its campus. The
university's school of journalism has already stated it will rename two of its
publications. Meanwhile, Calgary's board of education has passed a
motion to rename Langevin School, which is named after Hector-Louis Langevin,
one of the Fathers of Confederation who is considered an architect of the
residential school system. Support is available for anyone affected by
their experience at residential schools, and those who are triggered by the
latest reports.
A national Indian Residential
School Crisis Line has been set up to provide support for former students and
those affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by
calling the 24-hour national crisis line: 1-866-925-4419.
^ The more I learn about these Residential
Schools the more I see the pure evil that many non-Indigenous Canadians (not
just Government Officials, but Educators, Priests and Ordinary People) had.
They abused their faith and abused these children (at least mentally if not
physically.) These schools were in operation until 1996 so there is no excuse
of “it’s well in the past” since it has only been 25 years in some cases.
Anyone who participated in the running of these schools from the top-down needs
to be held accountable for the maltreatment and discrimination. The students
who survived or the families of those who did not survive need to be
compensated for their years of forced torture (I do believe in Reparations when
there are direct survivors or immediate family of the victims still alive.) ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/canada-residential-schools-kamloops-faq-1.6051632
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