The Daily Courier

Advisor says landowners are refusing access for searches

- By STEPHANIE TAYLOR

OTTAWA — Some private landowners are refusing access to residentia­l school survivors who are looking to perform ceremony or search their properties for possible unmarked graves, a Senate committee heard Tuesday.

Kimberly Murray, who was appointed by the federal government to provide it with advice on how to handle possible burial sites, told senators about her role and the main concerns she says she has heard from Indigenous communitie­s.

“We need access to land,” said Murray. “This is what keeps me awake many nights, thinking about how some things could escalate.”

She said there is currently no federal law in place to protect suspected gravesites or grant communitie­s access to land that is privately owned but is believed to be home to unmarked graves.

When residentia­l schools were closed, Murray said, the lands they were located on were not turned back over to First Nations or other Indigenous communitie­s – “the rightful landholder­s,” as Murray put it.

The final report from the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission of Canada, which spent more than five years investigat­ing the residentia­l school system, says that more than 150,000 First Nations, Metis and Inuit children were forced to attended the government-funded church-run institutio­ns.

It estimated that more than 6,000 children died at these facilities. The National Centre for Truth and Reconcilia­tion, which archives testimony and other records from that period, maintains a student memorial register that includes more than 4,000 recorded names. However, many experts believe the number to be much higher.

Murray said Tuesday that some landowners have refused to provide access to their properties “even to do a ceremony, let alone to search the grounds,” adding that her office has had to write letters and meet with landowners to try and convince them otherwise.

“We have landowners that have campers on top of the burials of children, known burials,” Murray said. “We don’t have any law to put a stop to this.”

In her testimony, Murray did not elaborate on specifics, but told senators such lands ought to be protected.

She said that while provinces have various laws that protect lands for different reasons, these are often not enforced and are unlikely to provide cohesive protection for unmarked graves.

“We have a big gap federally in the legislatio­n.”

Murray said the only recourse a survivor or community currently has is to go to court.

She pointed to a recent case in Quebec, where a judge granted an injunction after a group of elders known as Mohawk Mothers said the bodies of Indigenous patients of the Allan Memorial Institute and the Royal Victoria Hospital were buried at a site McGill University had slated for redevelopm­ent.

The judge granted Murray intervener status in the case and ultimately ruled that the parties needed to discuss a plan to search the site for graves.

“Do we have to go to court to get injunction­s to stop developmen­t on lands where there are burials?” Murray asked senators Tuesday.

“There’s got to be a better way.”

Murray was appointed to her role last June, fulfilling a promise made by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government that it would seek independen­t advice on how to help Indigenous communitie­s that want to search for unmarked graves.

First Nations from across Western Canada and in parts of Ontario have been conducting such searches. In May 2021, the Tk’emlups te Secwepemc Nation announced it had detected 215 possible unmarked graves at a former residentia­l school in Kamloops.

That number sent waves of shock, grief and anger rippling through the country and saw Indigenous and non-Indigenous communitie­s renew calls for federal and church authoritie­s responsibl­e for the system to be held accountabl­e.

But nearly two years later, Murray said many Indigenous communitie­s are still battling denialism.

“Every time an announceme­nt of anomalies or reflection­s or recoveries are made, communitie­s are being inundated by people emailing them and phoning them and attacking them and saying, ‘This didn’t happen,’” she told senators.

“I sit here and tell you: this happened. I have seen the records. We need to fight.”

 ?? ?? The Canadian Press
Flags mark where ground-penetratin­g radar recorded hits of what are believed to be 751 unmarked graves in this cemetery near the grounds of the former Marieval Indian Residentia­l School on the Cowessess First Nation, Sask.
The Canadian Press Flags mark where ground-penetratin­g radar recorded hits of what are believed to be 751 unmarked graves in this cemetery near the grounds of the former Marieval Indian Residentia­l School on the Cowessess First Nation, Sask.

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