Antelope Valley Press

Indigenous Canadians wary of pope apology

- By PETER SMITH

MASKWACIS, Alberta — To this day, Flo Buffalo doesn’t drink milk — not since two nuns force-fed her the sour milk she had refused at the Catholic-run Ermineskin Indian Residentia­l School for Indigenous children that she attended, in the 1960s.

Holding out her right hand, she showed how she has never been able to fully straighten it out since a nun severely beat her with a stick.

“The nuns, they were real mean,” Buffalo said.

With internatio­nal attention focusing on the former school in the prairie town of Maskwacis as Pope Francis visits, Monday, to apologize for abuses in a system designed to sever Native children from their tribal, family and religious bonds, Indigenous Canadians such as Buffalo are voicing a range of skepticism, wariness and hope.

Buffalo, a member of the Samson Cree First Nation in central Alberta, doesn’t often talk about her two years at the school. But ahead of the pontiff’s visit, she sat down to relate her experience­s to Associated Press journalist­s and a small group of teen girls who are learning about the traumatic legacy of the schools.

Speaking in the council chambers of the Montana First Nation, a neighborin­g Cree tribe where she now works, Buffalo recalled that the nuns, who were white, beat the girls when they spoke in their native Cree instead of English.

At the same time, Buffalo, 67, said she often defied the nuns. “I scared the hell out of them, because I wouldn’t put up with their …” she said, completing the sentence with a mischievou­s chuckle.

Buffalo still considers herself Catholic. But she’s not going to attend Monday’s event with Francis — she doesn’t want to deal with the crowds, and the ones she holds responsibl­e are the nuns who abused her and never offered an apology while they were alive.

“It shouldn’t be him apologizin­g,” Buffalo said. “It should be them.”

When Mavis Moberly heard the pope was coming, the news triggered some of the trauma she carries from her years at a residentia­l school in northern Alberta. But after tears, prayers and a traditiona­l smudging ceremony, a purificati­on rite with scented plants, she found herself looking forward to hearing the pope’s apology.

“Maybe it’s going to help me to heal and to have a little bit more inner peace,” she said after last Sunday’s Mass at Sacred Heart Church of the First Peoples, a Catholic parish in Edmonton oriented to Indigenous people and culture.

The papal apology is years, if not generation­s, in the making.

From the 19th century into much of the 20th, Canada’s government collaborat­ed with Catholic and Protestant churches to run residentia­l schools in “an education system in name only,” designed to weaken tribal identities and Indigenous resistance to land grabs, according to a 2015 report by the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission of Canada.

It identified 139 schools, the majority Catholic-run, where about 150,000 students were sent. “Children were abused, physically and sexually,” the report said, adding that schools were unsanitary and unsafe facilities where thousands of children died of disease, fire and other causes.

For decades, various Catholic and Protestant church groups have offered apologies, and Pope Benedict XVI, in 2009, expressed his “personal anguish.”

But the painful history took on new urgency, last year, when surveys of former schools with ground-penetratin­g radar found evidence of hundreds of unmarked graves.

Pope Francis met with a Canadian Indigenous delegation this spring and apologized “for the deplorable conduct of those members of the Catholic Church” involved with the schools. He also heeded survivors’ calls to make an apology on Canadian soil, leading to Monday’s event where thousands of attendees are expected.

Today, the Ermineskin residentia­l school has largely been torn down. In its place stands a newer set of school buildings, run by four Cree nations in and around Maskwacis. A large tipi in front of the secondary school demonstrat­es how educators are promoting pride in the once-suppressed Indigenous culture.

Rose Pipestem, a member of the Montana First Nation who is also a survivor of the Ermineskin school, said she will try to see the pope. But like Buffalo, she believes the perpetrato­rs should have apologized.

“I’m going to go see him,” she said, sitting in the council chambers near a line of photos of past Montana chiefs. “I’m not mad at him.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marlene Poitras participat­es, Sunday, in a smudging, a ceremonial burning of scented plants for purificati­on and blessing, with church elder Fernie Marty outside of Sacred Heart Church of the First Peoples in Edmonton, Alberta.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Marlene Poitras participat­es, Sunday, in a smudging, a ceremonial burning of scented plants for purificati­on and blessing, with church elder Fernie Marty outside of Sacred Heart Church of the First Peoples in Edmonton, Alberta.

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