用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
St. Eugene’s, Marieval, Kamloops: What we know about residential schools’ unmarked graves so far
2021-07-07 00:00:00.0     环球邮报-加拿大     原网页

       Open this photo in gallery

       Red handprints cover the pedestal of the just-toppled Queen Victoria statue outside the Winnipeg legislature on Canada Day, which became a day of action for Indigenous people and residential-school survivors across the country.

       Shannon VanRaes/Reuters

       Table of contents Findings at residential school sites Ground-penetrating radar What is a residential school? The cost of searching New calls for action

       From coast to coast, Indigenous people have long suspected that former residential schools – colonial institutions designed to separate children from their cultures – still had unmarked graveyards that hid their horrific human cost. Hundreds of such graves have been reported this summer as First Nations have used ground-penetrating radar, archival detective work and the help of experts to find the remains of long-lost loved ones.

       Three such communities – Cowessess in Saskatchewan, and Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc and Ktunaxa in B.C. – have gotten most of the attention this summer, but they aren’t the only ones with unmarked graves and won’t be the last to be brought to light. Here’s a primer on what’s they’ve found and how it’s rekindled Canadians’ conversations about the colonial legacy, reconciliation and what should be done to give the children’s remains proper respect.

       Need to talk with someone? There is a national Indian Residential School Crisis Line (1-866-925-4419). In B.C., a toll-free First Nations and Indigenous Crisis Line (1-800-588-8717) is offered through the KUU-US Crisis Line Society.

       What’s been found at the residential school sites Marieval Indian Residential School Open this photo in gallery

       A tepee on the Cowessess First Nation is surrounded by solar lights and flags that mark the spots where human remains were discovered.

       GEOFF ROBINS/AFP via Getty Images

       Where: Cowessess First Nation in Saskatchewan, east of Regina Findings: There are 751 unmarked graves in the Catholic cemetery near the former school, Chief Cadmus Delorme announced on June 23 in the initial findings of a Cowessess-led investigation that began earlier that month. The chief stressed that it is “not a mass grave site,” but unmarked individual graves containing both child and adult remains, and the investigation will address why any markers that once existed were removed. About the school: Marieval operated from the late 1890s to 1997, at first under various Catholic missionary orders, then the federal government from 1968 to 1981, and then local First Nations administrators (who argued closing it would put children at greater risk in foster care or schools farther away). The school building was demolished in 1999 and replaced with a day school. Kamloops Indian Residential School Open this photo in gallery

       Lights illuminate shoes and stuffed toys outside the site of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School.

       Jennifer Gauthier/Reuters

       Where: Tk’emlúps te Secwe?pemc First Nation, near Kamloops, B.C. Findings: Unmarked graves near the former school hold the remains of 215 children, the First Nation said on May 27 in preliminary findings of an investigation. Previously, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s registry could confirm only 51 deaths at Kamloops from 1914 to 1963. But the Tk’emlúps community long believed that more children were buried nearby and tried for about 20 years to find them. This year, a government grant allowed the First Nation to pay for ground-penetrating radar, which was used over the Victoria Day weekend to find the site. About the school: Kamloops was at one point the largest of Canada’s residential schools. It operated from 1890 to 1969, mostly under a Catholic order called the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, but the federal government ran it as a day school for nine more years before it closed in 1978. St. Eugene’s Mission School Open this photo in gallery

       St. Eugene’s Mission School in Cranbrook operated from 1912 to 1970.

       Where: Ktunaxa Nation, near Cranbrook, B.C. Findings: Aqam, one of four bands that make up the Ktunaxa Nation, went looking for unmarked graves in its cemetery after an incident last year when an unknown grave was disturbed there. They found 182 unmarked graves, according to preliminary results made public on June 30. About the school: The Catholic Church ran St. Eugene’s (originally called the Kootenay Indian Residential School) from 1912 until 1970. The site is now home to a resort and casino owned by Ktunaxa communities and the Shuswap Indian Band. (Return to top)

       How does ground-penetrating radar work?

       Ground penetrating radar, or GPR, is increasingly

       being seen as an effective tool to locate

       unmarked gravesites, such as those believed to

       be present around Canada’s residential schools.

       But experts say the work requires careful meth-

       odology, protocols and standards to ensure the

       findings are accurate and warn that the stakes

       are high.

       Sites are divided into grids to ensure accurate data collection

       Monitor

       Operator

       Antenna

       Control

       unit

       High-

       frequency

       radio waves

       GPR works by passing back and forth over a

       gridded survey site with a portable cart-mounted

       unit. The control unit emits a continuous series of

       high-frequency radio waves, which pass through

       the ground. The strength and rate at which this

       electromagnetic energy is reflected back from

       various materials is measured. Different substanc-

       es have various capacities to store or reflect elec-

       trical energy; metal has a high capacity to reflect

       energy, while dry sand has much less. The data is

       then displayed as a radargram that can be inter-

       preted by experts.

       Example of

       a GPR cross-

       sectional

       radargram

       JOHN SOPINSKI AND murat yükselir /THE

       GLOBE AND MAIl, sources: leica; geomodel

       inc. (radargram); sensors and software

       inc.; groundpenetratingradar.co.uk; geo-

       physical.com

       Ground penetrating radar, or GPR, is increasingly

       being seen as an effective tool to locate unmarked

       gravesites, such as those believed to be present

       around Canada’s residential schools. But experts say

       the work requires careful methodology, protocols and

       standards to ensure the findings are accurate and

       warn that the stakes are high.

       Sites are divided into grids to ensure accurate data collection

       Monitor

       Operator

       Antenna

       Control

       unit

       High-

       frequency

       radio waves

       GPR works by passing back and forth over a gridded

       survey site with a portable cart-mounted unit. The

       control unit emits a continuous series of high-fre-

       quency radio waves, which pass through the ground.

       The strength and rate at which this electromagnetic

       energy is reflected back from various materials is

       measured. Different substances have various capaci-

       ties to store or reflect electrical energy; metal has a

       high capacity to reflect energy, while dry sand has

       much less. The data is then displayed as a radargram

       that can be interpreted by experts.

       Example of

       a GPR cross-

       sectional

       radargram

       JOHN SOPINSKI AND murat yükselir /THE GLOBE AND

       MAIl, sources: leica; geomodel inc.(radargram);

       sensors and software inc.; groundpenetratingra-

       dar.co.uk; geophysical.com

       Ground penetrating radar, or GPR, is increasingly being seen as an

       effective tool to locate unmarked gravesites, such as those believed

       to be present around Canada’s residential schools. But experts say

       the work requires careful methodology, protocols and standards to

       ensure the findings are accurate and warn that the stakes are high.

       Monitor

       Operator

       Antenna

       Control

       unit

       High-

       frequency

       radio waves

       Sites are divided into grids to ensure accurate data collection

       GPR works by passing

       back and forth over a

       gridded survey site with

       a portable cart-mounted

       unit. The control unit

       emits a continuous series

       of high-frequency radio

       waves, which pass

       through the ground. The

       strength and rate at which

       this electromagnetic

       energy is reflected back

       from various materials is

       measured. Different sub-

       stances have various

       capacities to store or

       reflect electrical energy;

       metal has a high capacity

       to reflect energy, while

       dry sand has much less.

       The data is then displayed

       as a radargram that can

       be interpreted by experts.

       JOHN SOPINSKI AND murat

       yükselir /THE GLOBE AND

       MAIl, sources: leica; geo-

       model inc. (radargram);

       sensors and software inc.;

       groundpenetratingradar.

       co.uk; geophysical.com

       Example of

       a GPR cross-

       sectional

       radargram

       (Return to top)

       What is a residential school? Some context Open this photo in gallery

       An Anglican priest leads a funeral procession for a student around 1920 at Shingwauk Indian Residential School in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.

       Shingwauk Residential Schools Centre, Algoma University

       Who ran residential schools in Canada? From the 1870s to the 1990s, residential schools were part of a systematic federal policy to assimilate Indigenous children into European culture, based on racist assumptions that their own cultures were inferior.

       Children were separated from their families and lived in poorly funded schools where federal- or church-run staffs punished them for speaking their own languages. Physical and sexual abuse, malnutrition and disease were common. The last school in the country closed in 1997.

       Survivors pressed the government and churches for compensation and apologies, a process that led to a $2-billion settlement and the creation of the TRC. Its final report in 2015, based on interviews with more than 6,000 witnesses, said the schools amounted to cultural genocide and are inseparable from the present-day problems Indigenous people face, from high rates of poverty, suicide and incarceration to the loss of Indigenous lands and traditions.

       How many people died at residential schools? The TRC’s Missing Children Project has so far documented more than 4,100 deaths in the schools, but the full tally could be as high as 6,000.

       The 2015 report noted huge gaps in the available records of deceased students’ names, genders or even causes of death. Six of the TRC’s “calls to action” (71 to 76) have to do with missing children and burials, and demand a clear plan to tell families where their lost loved ones are buried and make sure cemeteries are well maintained.

       How many residential schools were there in Canada? There were 138 residential schools reviewed by the TRC, highlighted in the map below. Most of the school buildings have been demolished, but some were converted to other uses: The Mohawk Institute Residential School in Brantford, Ont., is reopening in 2024 as an educational and tourism facility, the Woodland Cultural Centre, after a restoration organized by survivors, historians and museum consultants.

       Hudson

       Bay

       Kamloops

       St. Anne’s

       Shubenacadie

       St. Mary’s

       Gordon’s

       Portage

       la Prairie

       UNITED STATES

       THE GLOBE AND MAIL

       SOURCE: truth and reconciliation commission

       Hudson

       Bay

       Kamloops

       St. Anne’s

       Shubenacadie

       St. Mary’s

       Gordon’s

       Portage

       la Prairie

       UNITED STATES

       THE GLOBE AND MAIL

       SOURCE: truth and reconciliation commission

       YUKON

       NWT

       NUNAVUT

       Hudson

       Bay

       B.C.

       ALTA.

       N.L.

       SASK.

       MAN.

       Kamloops

       St. Anne’s

       QUE.

       PEI

       ONT.

       Shubenacadie

       St. Mary’s

       Gordon’s

       N.B.

       Portage

       la Prairie

       N.S.

       UNITED STATES

       THE GLOBE AND MAIL, SOURCE: truth and reconciliation commission

       (Return to top)

       What will it cost to find all the unmarked graves? Several nations near school sites are pressing for government help to search for unmarked graves, a call supported by the Assembly of First Nations, the UN Human Rights Office and other groups. As of late June, Indigenous Services Canada said it had received more than 100 requests. In Ontario, for instance, Six Nations of the Grand River is asking for $10-million, the estimated cost of an archeological search, forensic examination and psychological and spiritual supports for the community. If similar estimates are applied to all the TRC-reviewed schools, it would add up to more than $1-billion.

       The Trudeau government has offered a lot less than that. In the 2019 budget, it earmarked $27-million to search for graves, but didn’t make it available until after the Kamloops findings were announced. MPs from all parties also passed a non-binding NDP motion that demanded the government speed up efforts to pay for search and identification efforts.

       (Return to top)

       Open this photo in gallery

       Madelyn Severight, 4, lays a flower back down before a candlelight vigil at the Saskatchewan legislature in Regina on Canada Day.

       David Stobbe/Reuters

       New calls for action Finding more unmarked graves is only one of the things Indigenous leaders and advocates are pressing Ottawa to do to help residential-school survivors and follow through on the TRC’s recommendations. These include:

       Action at the Vatican: A papal apology for residential schools was one of the goals recommended by the TRC, and Mr. Trudeau has asked the Vatican to make that happen, without result. Pope Francis spoke about the Kamloops graves at a Sunday service on June 6, but it wasn’t an apology; instead, he expressed his “closeness with the Canadian people” and said political and religious authorities should “continue to collaborate with the determination to shed light on this sad affair and to commit humbly to a path of reconciliation and healing.” Monuments and naming: Governments and public institutions are under renewed pressure to take down monuments or rename institutions that honour people who helped build the residential-school system in the 19th century, such as prime minister Sir John A. Macdonald and educator Egerton Ryerson. In Toronto, a Ryerson statue was torn down by protesters at the university named after him; in Charlottetown, city council voted to permanently remove a Macdonald statue that they had previously considered keeping with new signage. Oaths: Two of the TRC’s calls to action involved changing the Canadian citizenship oath to include references to Indigenous people and treaty obligations, and the federal government has fast-tracked a bill, C-8, to do that. It still needs to pass the Senate. The new oath would read: “I swear (or affirm) that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second, Queen of Canada, Her Heirs and Successors, and that I will faithfully observe the laws of Canada, including the Constitution, which recognizes and affirms the Aboriginal and treaty rights of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples, and fulfill my duties as a Canadian citizen.” Day of commemoration: Federal MPs were already nearing the final vote on C-5, a bill to make Sept. 30 a national day to commemorate residential-school victims and survivors, when the Kamloops discovery was made public. The bill was approved in the House and Senate and received royal assent in quick succession. (Return to top)

       More reading Indigenous voices Tanya Talaga: It’s time to bring our children home from the residential schools

       Jody Wilson-Raybould: Unmarked graves are a painful reminder of why we need leadership

       Indigenous poet Jordan Abel explores legacy of residential schools in mixed-media book

       Michelle Good’s debut novel, Five Little Indians, chronicles the aftermath of residential school

       Open this photo in gallery

       The Decibel podcast Will the Pope apologize for residential schools?

       In Kamloops with Tanya Talaga

       'It's unfathomable': Canada's lost residential school children

       Commentary: The church’s role Jeremy M. Bergen: The theological reason why the Catholic Church is reticent to apologize for residential schools

       George Valin and Maurice Switzer: After the Kamloops findings, Catholic bishops must pursue a papal apology – now

       Compiled by Globe staff

       With reports from Patrick White, Jana G. Pruden, Kristy Kirkup, Mike Hager, Carrie Tait, Andrea Woo, Kate Taylor, Tavia Grant, Jeffrey Jones and The Canadian Press

       


标签:综合
关键词: Kamloops     residential school sites     schools     children     findings     graves     radargram     Nations     reconciliation    
滚动新闻