Cape Breton Post

• Indigenous groups call for nationwide search

- ANNA MEHLER PAPERNY

TORONTO — Indigenous groups in Canada are calling for a nationwide search for mass graves at residentia­l school sites after the discovery of the remains of 215 children at one former school last week shocked the country.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Monday that searching for more mass graves was “an important part of discoverin­g the truth” but did not make specific commitment­s.

Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation announced last week they had found the remains of 215 children, some as young as three years old, buried at the site of the Kamloops Indian Residentia­l School, once Canada's largest such school.

Between 1831 and 1996, Canada's residentia­l school system forcibly separated children from their families, subjecting them to abuse, malnutriti­on and rape in what the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission tasked with investigat­ing the system called “cultural genocide” in 2015.

Last week's announceme­nt sparked outrage, prompting flags to be flown at half-staff and people to lay hundreds of tiny shoes in public squares, places of government and on the steps of churches, in reference to the role of Christian churches from a range of denominati­ons in running the schools.

There have long been rumors within indigenous communitie­s, also discussed by the commission, of children buried at these schools.

The fourth volume of the commission's report, titled ‘Missing Children and Unmarked Burials,' identified 3,200 children who died at residentia­l schools, about a third of whom were not named. Since that report's publicatio­n in 2015, an additional 900 have been identified.

Parents “spoke of children who went to school and never returned,” the report reads.

A working group establishe­d by the commission in 2007 proposed, among other things, a study to identify unmarked gravesites. While the federal government initially denied the $1.5 million needed to conduct this work, the government announced in 2019 $33.8 million over three years for a ‘National Residentia­l School Student Death Register' and an online registry of residentia­l school cemeteries.

Now there are renewed calls for Canada to do more to uncover what happened.

In meetings across the country, indigenous communitie­s are working to figure out how to investigat­e, said Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, president of the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs.

“It's absolutely essential that there be a national program to thoroughly investigat­e all residentia­l school sites in regard to unmarked mass graves,” he said.

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 ?? ASHLEY FRASER • POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? ABOVE: People came and went from Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Sunday, leaving behind shoes they set along the Centennial Flame in honour of the 215 children whose remains were found at the property of a residentia­l school in Kamloops, B.C.
RIGHT: Eva Lucassie held Inuuya Lucassie, who will soon be three years old, as they watched people place shoes. The federal government and communitie­s all across Canada have lowered flags to half-mast in honour of the children.
ASHLEY FRASER • POSTMEDIA NEWS ABOVE: People came and went from Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Sunday, leaving behind shoes they set along the Centennial Flame in honour of the 215 children whose remains were found at the property of a residentia­l school in Kamloops, B.C. RIGHT: Eva Lucassie held Inuuya Lucassie, who will soon be three years old, as they watched people place shoes. The federal government and communitie­s all across Canada have lowered flags to half-mast in honour of the children.

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