The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Men switched at birth in error 70 years ago receive state apology

- By Raoul Simons

TWO Canadian men switched at birth almost 70 years ago have been given a formal apology for being “wronged from the day they arrived on Earth”.

Richard Beauvais and Eddy Ambrose were born on the same day at the same hospital in Manitoba province in 1955 but were mistakenly taken home by each other’s biological parents.

The pair, both 68, only learnt the truth last year when Mr Beauvais took an at-home DNA test that showed he was not indigenous as he believed, but instead had Ukrainian and Jewish heritage. Mr Beauvais was raised Métis, an indigenous people in Canada of mixed native and European ancestry. Mr Ambrose grew up with a family who had come to Canada from Ukraine.

The premier of Manitoba, Wab Kinew, has formally apologised to Mr Beauvais and Mr Ambrose in person.

“It is something that has been owed to them for 68 years – in fact it’s been owed to them their entire lives,” said Mr Kinew, who made reference to the municipall­y run hospital in the Manitoban town of Arborg where the mistake happened.

“Ed and Richard are here today as two people wronged by the Manitoba government and the institutio­ns they should have been able to trust. They were wronged from the very first day each of them arrived here on Earth, at a hospital in Arborg.

“What happened to you cannot be undone but it must be acknowledg­ed and it must be atoned for.

“While we cannot take back the series of failures that caused your pain, we can perhaps make things a little easier now… on behalf of the Manitoba government, we sincerely apologise for our failure to care for you.”

Mr Kinew shared a story of how the two men’s lives had even overlapped prior to the DNA-test discovery.

As a child, Mr Ambrose asked a girl from a neighbouri­ng town to join his baseball team, Mr Kinew said, “not knowing that she was actually his biological sister”.

Mr Beauvais’s father died when he was three years old, leaving him with his mother and his younger siblings.

He attended a school for indigenous children. However, he was later forcibly taken from his family in the Sixties Scoop, an assimilati­onist policy in Canada where indigenous children were placed either in foster care or adopted outside of their communitie­s.

Since discoverin­g his true identity, Mr Ambrose has been in touch with his biological relatives.

Mr Ambrose and Mr Beauvais have engaged Bill Gange, a Winnipeg-based lawyer, in the hope of gaining financial compensati­on from the province.

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