Ottawa Citizen

MP offers tearful testimony to commission

Saganash is a survivor of residentia­l schools

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MONTREAL A member of Parliament has tearfully testified during a truth and reconcilia­tion hearing about the damage he suffered in an Indian Residentia­l School.

New Democrat MP Romeo Saganash cried Friday as he described the death of his brother Johnny, whom he never met.

He said his family still doesn’t have a death certificat­e or know what really happened.

The MP was separated from his family and sent to a residentia­l school in the Quebec town of La Tuque. He says he wasn’t even allowed to return home for his father’s funeral.

Saganash told the audience at the Montreal hearings of the federal Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission that he might look like a normal person, but he isn’t.

“I can never be normal,” said Saganash, who for the first few years of his life spoke Cree and lived in nature. “And none, none of those kids who were sent to residentia­l schools can claim to be normal today. It’s impossible.”

Like several others who spoke at the hearing, Saganash said injustices to aboriginal peoples did not stop with the closing of residentia­l schools.

“There are still racist policies against aboriginal­s,” said Saganash, who referred to the federal Indian Act. “Even when we get a victory before the courts, the government continues to fight against our fundamenta­l rights.”

The residentia­l school system existed from the 1870s until the 1990s and saw about 150,000 native youth taken from their families and sent to church-run schools under a deliberate policy of “civilizing” First Nations.

Many students were physically, mentally and sexually abused.

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