Annapolis Valley Register

Canada’s $2.8-billion settlement with Indigenous Day Scholars a long time coming

- JACKSON PIND THECONVERS­ATION.COM

Eleven years. That’s how long it took the federal government to agree with 325 First Nations over the collective loss of language and culture suffered by Day Scholars in the Residentia­l School system in Canada that existed between the mid 1800s until 1996.

Day scholars attended a Residentia­l School during the day but didn’t sleep there overnight.

While Day Scholars settled an individual compensati­on package for just $10,000 each earlier in 2022, this new agreement is specifical­ly aimed at rectifying the systematic and forced removal of language and culture through these institutio­ns.

LEFT OUT OF ORIGINAL AGREEMENT

In 2012, members of the Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc and shíshálh Nation led by Shane Gottfrieds­on and Garry Feschuk launched a national classactio­n lawsuit for Day Scholars who were left out of the original Indian Residentia­l School (IRS) Settlement Agreement (2006).

The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission had already determined that abuse was suffered by students who were forced to attend Residentia­l Schools at night, but nearby public schools during the day.

In “The Survivors Speak” section of the report, Emily Kematch who attended the Residentia­l School in Dauphin, Man., which operated under this Day Scholars model at the time explained:

“It wasn’t a good experience. ‘Cause this was my first time too, going to the white system with the white kids and we weren’t treated very well there. We got called down quite a bit. They use to call us squws and neechies, and dirty Indian, you know. They’d drive by in their cars and say awful things to us. Even the girls didn’t associate with us, the white girls, they didn’t associate with us.”

This institutio­n was also where, the “one recorded prosecutio­n for the abuse of Residentia­l School students in Manitoba” occurred. The TRC noted: “In 2005, Ernest Constant who had attended the Dauphin school in the early 1960s and worked there in the late 1960 as a supervisor was convicted of indecently assaulting seven Dauphin students.” Day Scholars experience­d similar types of abuse as people whose experience­s were included under earlier agreements, but it has taken over 16 years to receive some form of justice.

DECADE-LONG COURT BATTLES

Each one of the subsequent class-action settlement agreements has taken roughly a decade to unfold through the legal process:

Indian Residentia­l School Settlement Agreement (1990s ca.-2006); Indian Day School Settlement Agreement (2009-2019); and now the Indian Residentia­l School Day Scholars Agreement (2012-2023).

Together these agreements represent the largest reparation­s paid to Indigenous people as a direct result of colonialis­m. However, each agreement has been earned through the dedication of survivors to fight these battles through court, not the generosity of the Canadian state.

325 FIRST NATIONS

Unlike the previous two agreements, this agreement finally allows for all 325 First Nations to decide themselves how the funding will revitalize their language and culture independen­tly of the government.

Direct ownership of the funding will not funnel through law firms, or government bodies, but rather through the First Nations themselves. If officially settled at the end of February, communitie­s will be provided an initial $200,000 followed by sustained payments over the course of the next two decades to support this revitaliza­tion through the hiring of staff, creation of learning centres or in any other way they see fit.

While this provides an opportunit­y to protect critically endangered languages, it only provides a small one-time compensati­on payment of $10,000 for eligible members.

Last January, these one-timepaymen­ts were opened, but the Gottfrieds­on class-action continued to fight for a separate band of funding for language revitaliza­tion efforts which was announced last week.

This agreement also signals a defining moment for the Trudeau government to settle all outstandin­g claims against the Canadian state.

DEFINING MOMENT

On one hand, this prevents the revictimiz­ation of students who suffered through the Indian Residentia­l School Settlement Independen­t Assessment Process. But on the other, it does not provide greater compensati­on to those who suffered the most.

This agreement also signals a defining moment for the Trudeau government to settle all outstandin­g claims against the Canadian state.

The agreement’s wording suggests that the government will be “Fully, finally and forever” released from collective harms suffered in Residentia­l Schools.

It is not immediatel­y clear if that same condition also falls on the churches in Canada who operated the schools and perpetuate­d the loss of culture and language along with other horrendous abuses. Last summer, The Canadian Press reported details of a 2015 agreement in which Canada agreed to “forever discharge” Catholic entities from their promise to raise $25 million for Residentia­l School survivors. The discharge happened after Catholic entities raised less than $4 million.

In September 2021, in the wake of criticism, Canadian bishops pledged to raise $30 million by January 2027.

In Nov. 2022, APTN reported $5.5 million has been raised to date and that the Canadian Catholic Church spent $18.6 million on the papal visit.

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