Times Colonist

Beyak removed from Senate committee over residentia­l school remarks

-

OTTAWA — Conservati­ve Sen. Lynn Beyak, who famously declared “some good” came out of Canada’s residentia­l schools, has been kicked off the Senate’s committee on Aboriginal Peoples.

Jake Enwright, a spokesman for interim Conservati­ve leader Rona Ambrose, confirmed the decision in a statement late Wednesday.

“Ms. Ambrose has been clear that Sen. Beyak’s views do not reflect the Conservati­ve party’s position on residentia­l schools,” Enwright said.

Canada’s Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission spent six years examining the legacy of the government-funded, church-operated schools, infamous hotbeds of abuse and mistreatme­nt that operated from the 1870s to 1996.

The Conservati­ves were in power in 2008 when the federal government delivered an abject apology in the House of Commons to families and survivors, a fact not lost on Enwright.

“It was Prime Minister Stephen Harper who made an historic apology to the victims of residentia­l schools and launched the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission,” he said.

This week, Sen. Sandra Lovelace Nicholas, who sits on the aboriginal committee, said she was “shocked and dismayed” by her Senate colleague’s remarks.

She said she would boycott the committee’s meetings as long as Beyak remained a member.

Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde has also called for Beyak to be removed from the committee.

Last month, Beyak told the Senate that she believed the schools were not all bad.

“I speak partly for the record, but mostly in memory of the kindly and wellintent­ioned men and women and their descendant­s — perhaps some of us here in this chamber — whose remarkable works, good deeds and historical tales in the residentia­l schools go unacknowle­dged for the most part and are overshadow­ed by negative reports.”

Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett has called the comments unfortunat­e and misguided, calling them proof of a need to educate Canadians about the long-standing legacy of the schools.

Sen. Murray Sinclair, who led the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission’s exhaustive investigat­ion into the impact of residentia­l schools, was present in the upper chamber during Beyak’s remarks.

The work of the commission lead by Sinclair was the result of the Indian Residentia­l Schools Settlement Agreement, reached after residentia­l school survivors took the federal government and churches to court with the support of the Assembly of First Nations and Inuit organizati­ons.

It was designed to help repair the lasting damage caused by the schools, and — in addition to compensati­ng survivors — to explore the truth behind the program.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada