Saturday, May 29, 2021

ANOTHER CATHOLIC CHURCH SCANDAL

Mass grave with 215 Indigenous kids found on former school grounds in Canada 

 

By Gabrielle Fonrouge

 

New York Post

May 28, 2021

 

A mass grave filled with the remains of 215 Indigenous children, some as young as three, has been found on the grounds of a former residential school in Canada that was known for physical, emotional and sexual abuse, reports said Friday. 

The grisly discovery in the interior of southern British Columbia was made at the former Kamloops Indian residential school using ground-penetrating radar and announced late Thursday by the Tk’emlups te Secwépemc people, The Guardian reported

“We had a knowing in our community that we were able to verify. To our knowledge, these missing children are undocumented deaths,” Rosanne Casimir, the chief of the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc, said in a statement.

Casimir said at this stage, there are “more questions than answers” as it’s unknown how the kids died, or when, and it’s believed the deaths were never officially recorded. 

The school was open between 1890 and 1978 and ran by the Roman Catholic Church as part of a network of institutions across Canada. They were created to forcibly assimilate Indigenous children by taking them from their homes and forbidding them from speaking their native languages or engaging in cultural practices, the outlet reported. 

 

The children whose remains were found were students at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia (pictured) that closed in 1978

The remains of 215 children, some as young as three years old, were found at the site. Many area feared to have succumbed to diseases including TB, although abuse was rife at the school

The schools were hotbeds for forced labor and physical, emotional and sexual abuse and at least 150,000 kids attended them throughout their existence, the outlet reported. 

In 2015, a historic Truth and Reconciliation Commission probing the residential school’s history described them as a “culture of genocide” targeting Indigenous people in Canada. 

Former attendees of the school told the commission the conditions were brutal — living spaces were unsanitary, insufficiently heated and “Every Indian student smelled of hunger,” one former pupil who attended in the 1920s said. 

 

The Kamloops school was established in 1890 and operated until 1969, its roll peaking at 500 during the 1950s when it was the largest in the country. Children were banned from speaking their own language or practicing any of their customs. This undated archival photo shows a group of young girls at the school

In 1920, the Canadian Government passed a law making it compulsory for children between 7 and 15 to attend the residential schools. Many children died of abuse and neglect, and infectious diseases such as tuberculosis
 

Outbreaks of measles, tuberculosis, influenza and other contagious diseases were rampant at the facility and many kids died as a result.

Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, director of the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, told CBC the discovery confirms what the community has known for years — many kids were sent to the school and never returned. 

“There may be reasons why they wouldn’t record the deaths properly and that they weren’t treated with dignity and respect because that was the whole purpose of the residential school … to take total control of Indian children, to remove their culture, identity and connection to their family,” she told the outlet. 

Casimir told CBC that a report will be provided on the discovery next month and the findings are “preliminary.”

1 comment:

bob walsh said...

I admit I had always heard the Canadians treated their native people a whole lot better than we did. I guess I heard wrong.