Montreal Gazette

Teaching history high on action list

Interim report on residentia­l schools also proposes aboriginal healing and cultural-revival programs

- HEATHER YUNDT

Funding for education, healing and cultural-revival programs were among the major recommenda­tions laid out in an interim report officially released Friday by the commission establishe­d to explore the legacy of Canada’s residentia­l school system.

The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission’s report lists 20 recommenda­tions – the result of the commission­ers’ Canada-wide tour to hear the stories of former students of residentia­l schools.

Among the recommenda­tions, the report said the federal, provincial and territoria­l government­s should take measures to support healing by establishi­ng – and ensuring there are resources for – health and wellness centres specializi­ng in childhood trauma, long-term grief and culturally appropriat­e treatment.

The commission also included some budget recommenda­tions for the federal government.

It recommends Canada and churches establish a revival fund to finance projects that promote the sharing and relearning of traditiona­l knowledge lost in residentia­l schools.

In addition, it recommende­d the government restore funding to the Aboriginal Healing Foundation, a national non-profit organizati­on that provides aboriginal-directed healing initiative­s to address the legacy of the residentia­l school system.

Reconcilia­tion, the report emphasizes, requires that the damaged relationsh­ip between aboriginal and non-aboriginal Canadians be repaired.

“Canadians have generally been led to believe – by what has been taught and not taught in schools – aboriginal people were and are uncivilize­d, primitive, and inferior, and continue to need to be civilized,” the report states.

At a news conference Friday, Commission­er Marie Wilson said all Canadians lose from ignorance about what happened in residentia­l schools.

“We have all been the losers for lack of that knowledge and understand­ing,” she said. “It has led us to a place of stereotype­s and judgment and an inability to connect the dots between the realities of our country today and the 130-year history of contributi­ng factors that led to it.”

Former residentia­l school student Salamiva Weetaluktu­k says current stereotype­s stem from the abuse endured through the residentia­l school system.

“Nobody is making the connection. Bad Indians, Bad Inuit. Drunken Inuit. Drunken Indians. That’s all they think,” she said in her testimony to the commission. “But we would not be drunken Inuit or drunken Indians had we not been abused when we were children, had we not been exposed to assault and stuff like that.”

To improve the relationsh­ip between aboriginal and non-aboriginal Canadians, the report says public awareness and understand­ing of the history of residentia­l schools must be improved.

The document recommends provinces and territorie­s create ageappropr­iate curricula about residentia­l schools for public schools and that the government provide all high schools with a copy of the 2009 Statement of Apology for public display.

The commission found the breakdown of family relationsh­ips was one of the greatest impacts of the residentia­l schools.

“We lost our childhood, we lost our families, the joy of our spirits and our innocence,” Northwest Territorie­s deputy premier Jackson Lafferty said Friday.

The residentia­l school system has left a mark not only on those who were forced to attend the institutio­ns, but also on the children and grandchild­ren of those people, the report says.

Removed from their families, aboriginal children who grew up in the schools did not learn how to parent and passed their suffering down to their children.

The commission is halfway through its five-year mandate, which will end in 2014 with the release of a full report.

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