Ottawa Citizen

School survivors feel left out of event

- Janice Dickson

OTTAWA • Residentia­l school survivors complained of not being given a chance to speak Monday at an event marking the 10-year anniversar­y of Canada’s apology in the House of Commons.

Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett gave a speech at the Canadian Museum of History to mark 10 years since the previous Conservati­ve government issued a formal apology for residentia­l schools — but she was quickly overshadow­ed by survivors who felt compelled to share their experience­s.

Survivors Peter Sackaney and his sister Vivian Timmins took the stage just before elders were expected to deliver a closing prayer.

As a boy in residentia­l school, Sackaney said he was ordered not to speak — a memory that came to him as he listened to Bennett’s remarks.

“I said, ‘No, no, no, I want to get up and say something, because I’m no longer that little boy. I’m a man,’” he said.

The event at the museum, hosted by Bennett’s office and organized by the Legacy of Hope Foundation, included a healing ceremony, remarks by Bennett and others, and the unveiling of a new art exhibit that pays tribute to survivors.

During the healing ceremony, Sackaney said, he had an urge to say, “I’m hungry” — something he’d been forbidden from expressing at school.

“They starved me,” he said. “Always, always when it comes to honouring survivors of residentia­l schools — put them up here — let people see they’re real.”

Timmins took aim at the event itself, saying she only learned about it on Friday — and that other survivors would likely feel excluded from the formalitie­s.

“Why was this done last minute? Why wasn’t it planned?” she asked. “Why weren’t we aware of any of this? Where are all of the survivors?”

A spokespers­on for Bennett said her office was not responsibl­e for organizing the event at the museum, and that the department had been in touch with partner organizati­ons for about two months before a second event that took place Monday in the Commons foyer.

James Fitz-Morris also noted that the entire schedule had to change late last week because the department wanted the events to take place later in the day — but then votes were scheduled.

Timmins gave an emotional account of her experience in residentia­l schools, including being forced to eat her own vomit.

WHY WEREN’T WE AWARE OF ANY OF THIS? WHERE ARE ALL OF THE SURVIVORS?

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? The office of Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett said she was not involved in organizing Monday’s event marking the tenth anniversar­y of the government’s apology to survivors of residentia­l schools.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES The office of Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett said she was not involved in organizing Monday’s event marking the tenth anniversar­y of the government’s apology to survivors of residentia­l schools.

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