National Post

‘I am very sorry,’ Pope tells Métis delegation

- KELLY GERALDINE MALONE

A Métis group from Manitoba says Pope Francis took ownership of the harms done by the Roman Catholic Church during the first meeting with an Indigenous group at the Vatican since the pontiff ’s historic apology.

“He understand­s the damage that was done and he asked that we in that room and the Red River Métis forgive him and the Church,” Manitoba Métis Federation president David Chartrand said after the meeting Thursday. “That’s a very powerful way to start the healing process.”

Andrew Carrier said he spoke about his experience­s as an abuse survivor at a Catholic day school. The Pope was sincere and listened, Carrier said.

“We need to overcome this pain and move forward,” he said.

On April 1, after meetings with First Nations, Inuit and Métis groups, Francis apologized for the conduct of church members involved in residentia­l schools. He stood before a room of nearly 200 Indigenous delegates and asked for God’s forgivenes­s for the actions of the Catholic Church.

“I want to say to you with all my heart: I am very sorry,” Francis said in Italian. “And I join my brothers, the Canadian bishops, in asking your pardon.”

An estimated 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend residentia­l schools, more than 60 per cent of which were run by the Catholic Church.

The Manitoba Métis Federation organized the separate meeting with the Pope because the group last year withdrew from the Métis National Council following years of internal conflict.

The national council was part of the larger Indigenous delegation.

Chartrand said the Manitoba Métis understood there “were individual­s that were predators, evil and did such harm to so many. It wasn’t the Church.”

After the apology, there was pushback from some Indigenous people in Canada who said it focused on the actions of a few members of the Church. They said the apology did not recognize the lasting damage that was done.

Chartrand said Métis people experience­d significan­t harm to their culture, language and identity through actions of the churches. But, he said, the ties between Metis and the Roman Catholic Church remain deep and strong.

A Catholic priest played a significan­t role in Métis leader Louis Riel’s founding of what would become Manitoba. Rev. Noel-joseph Ritchot led the delegation Riel sent to Ottawa to negotiate the provisiona­l government’s entry into Confederat­ion.

Riel himself was Catholic but also wrote about his issues with the Church.

The group gave the Pope a scroll that explained the Métis history with the church, beaded moccasins, a Louis Riel coin and beaded crosses. They received a brass olive branch in return.

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