From Reuters:
“U.S. to investigate former
Indian boarding schools, find any remains”
(U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland speaks
during a Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources hearing on her
nomination to be Interior Secretary on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, U.S.
February 23, 2021.)
The U.S. government will
investigate the dark history of Indian boarding schools, and work to find the
remains of children who died in them, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said on
Tuesday. Haaland, a former congresswoman from New Mexico and the first Native
American to serve as a Cabinet secretary, last year introduced legislation
calling for a Truth and Healing Commission into conditions at former Indian
boarding schools. Haaland did not provide details on exactly how the Interior
Department would carry out the investigation but she said that given that it
oversaw the schools, it was uniquely positioned to do so. "We must shed
light on the traumas of the past," Haaland said in remarks delivered via
video to the National Congress of American Indians. "We must uncover the
truth about the loss of human life, and the lasting consequences of these
schools."
The department would work on
discovering who attended the schools, where the schools were located and to
find the remains of children who died there. Conditions at former Indian
boarding schools gained global attention last month when tribal leaders in
Canada announced the discovery of the unmarked graves of 215 children at the
site of the former Kamloops residential school for indigenous children, as such
institutions are known in Canada. Unlike the United States, Canada carried out
a full investigation into its schools via a Truth and Reconciliation
Commission.
The U.S. government has yet to
provide any true accounting of the legacy of such schools, including never
acknowledging how many children attended them, how many children died or went
missing from them or even how many schools existed. For over 150 years, Native
American children in the United States were forcibly removed from their tribes
and sent to such schools beginning in 1819. Many children were abused at the
schools, and tens of thousands were never heard from again, activists and
researchers say. read more The Interior Department oversaw the Indian boarding
schools and carried out the policies of removing children from tribes in an
attempt to forcibly assimilate Native Americans.
^ This is long over-due in the
United States and needs to only be done, but also the findings of the report
need to be made widely known among the American People since it wasn’t too long
ago that the schools were in operation. ^
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