The Telegram (St. John's)

POPE MUST APOLOGIZE IN WAKE OF KAMLOOPS DISCOVERY

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I think Pope Francis, whatever his motivation, has disappoint­ed many of his most loyal supporters. As a Roman Catholic, I wish he could have spoken more directly to the issue of accountabi­lity.

Although the current pope had no involvemen­t in the setting up or management of residentia­l schools, he does represent the church for many of us, and he must know that his response to the Kamloops discovery would be crucial. I have no insight into the pope’s thinking on this or any other matter, but I’m hoping he will have something more pontifical to say in due course.

The residentia­l schools represent one more side of the European colonizati­on effort, which was aided and abetted by Christian denominati­ons. Spanish, Portuguese and French colonizers were supported by the church of Rome, while Belgium, Germany and Holland used Protestant missionari­es to assist in the invasion of many lands in the Americas, Africa and Asia. European entreprene­urs wanted access to minerals and to agricultur­al real estate; the missionari­es wanted “souls for Christ.” The net result was, and remains, a vast and unremedied injustice.

Residentia­l schools were intended to wipe out the so-called “pagan” cultures of Indigenous peoples, and to prepare them to become consumers of Eurocentri­c culture, including Christiani­ty. There are still those who consider this to have been a good thing, but most of us, I think, have been dismayed by the cruelty, the inhumanity, the colossal injustice of European colonial invasions around the world. For most of us, such cultural destructio­n and distortion are plainly wrong, unjust and yes, grievously sinful. We have no hesitation in expressing our sense of outrage.

Whatever considerat­ions may be holding Pope Francis back from an unambiguou­s condemnati­on of the residentia­l school system, I pray that he will soon overcome his hesitancy and bring the full weight of his residual pontifical authority down on the side of justice. While his influence is less today than in previous generation­s, he still retains the loyalty of millions of humans. We will be relieved to hear the judgment of this thoughtful and sensitive leader.

Ed Healy Marystown

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