‘Nothing good’ about residential schools, says Anglican Church
In response to Senator Lynn Beyak’s assertion that Canadians ignore the “abundance of good” that happened in residential schools, one of the system’s primary operators issued a statement Monday saying “there was nothing good.”
“There was nothing good about children going missing and no report being filed. There was nothing good about burying children in unmarked graves far from their ancestral homes,” reads a statement co-signed by the Most Rev. Fred Hiltz, archbishop of the Anglican Church of Canada.
Although the majority of Canada’s residential schools were operated by Roman Catholic dioceses, about a third fell under the purview of Anglican organizations.
“There are hundreds of students who went to Residential Schools administered by the Anglican Church of Canada … we have hung our heads in shame and raised them with remorse over the pain our church inflicted upon those children,” said Monday’s statement, which detailed abuses of the system that were “nothing less than crimes against humanity.”
Twice this year, Belak has issued statements expressing “disappointment” Canada does not place more emphasis on the “good people doing good things” at Indian Residential Schools.
Indigenous children across Canada were forcibly removed from their families and enrolled in the schools, which carried the explicit goal of extinguishing native culture and language, and were rife with disease, poor conditions and sexual abuse.
In its Monday statement, the Anglican Church said that “good, well-intentioned” staff did indeed exist in residential schools, but that these “glimpses of good” were far overshadowed by a system that ultimately “failed God.”
“While there is no doubt that some good things happened, that is so clearly not the whole story that it demands a response,” it read.