From the CBC:
“Pope says
genocide took place at Canada's residential schools”
Pope Francis
described Canada's residential school system and its forced assimilation of
Indigenous children as genocide. Brock Pitawanakwat, the co-ordinator of the
Indigenous Studies program at York University, called the Pope's comments
'late,' but said they were an 'important development.' While the word genocide
wasn't heard in any of Pope Francis's addresses during a week-long trip to
Canada, on his flight back to Rome, he said everything he described about the
residential school system and its forced assimilation of Indigenous children
amounts to genocide. "I didn't use the word genocide because it didn't
come to mind but I described genocide," Pope Francis told reporters on the
papal flight from Iqaluit to Rome on Friday.
Over the last
week, the Pope visited Edmonton, Quebec City and Iqaluit on a "penitential
pilgrimage" of healing, reconciliation and hope between the Catholic
Church and Indigenous people. While addressing residential school survivors and
their families in Maskwacis, Alta., Francis expressed deep sorrow for harms
suffered at the church-run schools and asked for forgiveness "for the
wrong done by so many Christians to the Indigenous peoples." The Catholic
Church ran over half of the residential schools in Canada. More than 150,000
First Nations, Métis and Inuit children were forced to attend the
government-funded schools between the 1870s and 1997.
The Truth and
Reconciliation Commission, which released its final report in 2015, concluded
that the school system amounted to cultural genocide. Since 2021, when the
discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves at former residential school sites
waved across the news, many are calling what had transpired more than cultural
genocide. Last year, NDP member of Parliament Leah Gazan made a failed bid for
Parliament to recognize the residential school experience as genocide, as she
believes it meets the definition of genocide drafted by the United Nations.
The United
Nations defines the term as a number of acts committed with the "intent to
destroy, in whole or in part, a national ethnical, racial or religious
group" such as killing members, inflicting bodily or mental harm to
members, deliberate physical destruction in whole or in part, imposing measures
intending to prevent births within a group, or forcibly transferring children
of the group to another group.
The National
Centre for Truth and Reconciliation in Winnipeg, which holds the records
gathered by the TRC, has documented 4,118 children who died at residential
schools thus far. In his multiple speeches over the week, Pope Francis
described the school system as a policy of assimilation and enfranchisement,
and that it harmed families by undermining their language, culture, and worldview.
"I condemned it, taking away children, changing culture, the mind,
traditions, a so-called race. A whole culture," Pope Francis told
reporters. "Yes, it's a technical word, genocide. I didn't use it because
it didn't come to mind. But yes, I described it. Yes, it's a genocide."
Rescinding
the Doctrine of Discovery Indigenous people from coast-to-coast-to-coast
have been calling for papal bulls that make up the Doctrine of Discovery to be
rescinded. The calls grew louder at each stop of the papal visit, with
arguments being made that the papal bulls, or edicts, are the root cause of
genocide against Indigenous peoples and laid the foundation for Canada to
establish assimilation policies like the residential school system. When
asked about issuing a statement on the Doctrine of Discovery, Francis did not
answer the question directly but talked about it as a doctrine of colonization.
"It's true, it's bad. It's unjust. Even today it's used," he
said. "That mentality, that we're superior and Indigenous people don't
count, that's why we have to work on … what was done that was bad, but with the
awareness that even today, that same colonialism exists."
Support is
available for anyone affected by their experience at residential schools or 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. Mental health counselling and crisis support is also
available 24 hours a day, seven days a week through the Hope for Wellness
hotline at 1-855-242-3310 or by online chat at www.hopeforwellness.ca.
^ The Pope’s visit
to Canada accomplished what it was supposed to – officially apologizing for
what the Catholic Church did to the Indigenous People especially regarding the
Residential Schools and to go to the places and to see some of the people that
were directly affected by the Church’s Actions.
I hope that
now the apology is made that the Catholic Church will do more to help the
victims and their families that suffered and continue to suffer from these past
traumas. Any records or information they have should be given to the Federal,
Provincial, Territorial and Tribal Governments. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/pope-francis-residential-schools-genocide-1.6537203
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