Penticton Herald

Walk for the Children marches on in Penticton

- MARK BRETT

Nearly 200 people created a sea of orange along the Penticton waterfront at the National Day of Truth and Reconcilia­tion Walk for the Children.

After a brief, beachfront ceremony at the iconic Peach, elders, many of them residentia­l school survivors, lead the procession to the Syilx Indian Residentia­l School Nation’s monument on En’owkin Trail five km

“No child should ever have to go through what we did in those places, it was like a nightmare that you could never wake up from,” said Josephine Jack of Alberta who was in Penticton visiting family. “It took everything away from being a child, the abuse that we had done to us and seeing it happen to other children and friends who just disappeare­d. It was hell.

“What we need most is healing and for it to never happen again.”

However, according to walk organizers, that healing process has run into a roadblock with the federal government’s promises little more than not living up to its commitment­s, calling them “empty” commitment­s and “hollow” promises.

“The Province of BC and Government of Canada continue to use the term ‘truth and reconcilia­tion as a means for political gain because it makes them look good,” said Chief Greg Gabriel of the Penticton Indian Band. “On the ground we continue to fight and are challenged every day with their colonial bureaucrac­y and legislatio­n that have profound impacts on our daily lives.”

The Syilx Indian Residentia­l School Committee has since been formed to provide direction on projects related to residentia­l schools. It is made up of intergener­ational Syilx Indian Residentia­l School survivors.

“All Canadians must hold their government to task and ensure that paths toward both truth and reconcilia­tion take place in a meaningful and lasting manner,” said Gabriel.

 ?? MARK BRETT / Local Journalism Initiative ?? Orange shirts abound at organized walk along the waterfront in Penticton marking the National Day of Truth and Reconcilia­tion Walk for the Children, a day created to raise awareness and contemplat­ion of past injustices.
MARK BRETT / Local Journalism Initiative Orange shirts abound at organized walk along the waterfront in Penticton marking the National Day of Truth and Reconcilia­tion Walk for the Children, a day created to raise awareness and contemplat­ion of past injustices.

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