The Hamilton Spectator

Search for graves starts at former residentia­l school

This is where they took away my culture and language, Saskatchew­an survivor says //

- JULIA PETERSON

DELMAS, SASKATCHEW­AN — For elder Jenny Spyglass, returning to the site of a former residentia­l school in Saskatchew­an where a search for unmarked graves is underway brought back memories of what she lost.

Spyglass, now in her 70s, was taken to the Delmas/Thunderchi­ld Indian Residentia­l School, located 160 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon, when she was three years old.

Her brother died there of starvation at age four, she said.

“This is where they took my culture away,” she said. “They took my language away from me. They took that love away from my mom. A two- or threeyear-old girl would love to have their mom with them every day, every morning, feeding them, loving them. I didn’t have that, growing up.”

Spyglass joined other survivors, relatives and supporters on the former school grounds Saturday as the Battleford­s Agency Tribal Chiefs (BATC) searched for unmarked graves at the site.

Spyglass said those overseeing the school cut her hair and threw her clothes away when she arrived as a child.

She was punished if she spoke her language and was once locked up in a basement, hungry and crying, for hugging her brothers. “I come from a poor family, but there was love in there. When I came here, there was no love. When I came here, there was punishment for being who I am.”

The Delmas/Thunderchi­ld school was operated by the Roman Catholic Church from 1901 to 1948, when it burned down.

The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission report found the school was overcrowde­d and many students became sick or died of typhoid, tuberculos­is, jaundice, pneumonia and other illnesses.

An estimated 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Métis children attended residentia­l schools between the 1860s and 1996. The commission documented stories from survivors and families and issued a report in 2015 that detailed mistreatme­nt, including emotional, physical and sexual abuse. It said there were at least 4,100 deaths across Canada.

While engineers from SNC-Lavalin began their groundpene­trating radar search Saturday, elder Mary Bernadette Fineday shared stories about her family’s experience at Delmas. Both her parents went to the school, she said.

“My mom used to tell me — I would ask ‘what’s wrong’ and she would say ‘we were treated badly,’ ” Fineday said.

Fineday was born in 1942 and said the school burned down in 1948. She never attended the residentia­l school herself, but the students left a lasting impression on her.

“I remember I used to see girls,” she said. “They used to go two by two, and I used to wonder where they were going.”

In June, the BATC announced their plan to begin to search this site for unmarked graves. The search is expected to continue intermitte­ntly until the ground freezes.

Karen Whitecalf, board secretary for the BATC and project lead for the residentia­l school ground searches at Delmas and in the Battleford­s, said oral history accounts have described a graveyard by the site of the former school.

That land is now privately owned, but Whitecalf said the BATC has formed a strong relationsh­ip with Donna and Doug McBain, who purchased the property two years ago.

“We are just grateful they have given us this opportunit­y to search their land for our children,” Whitecalf said.

Doug McBain said he and Donna did not know about the potential gravesite when they purchased the property, but soon started hearing rumours.

“It was scary,” he said. “Living in a graveyard is not anybody’s cup of tea, I’m sure.”

If bodies are found on the McBains’ property, Doug McBain said they will act as “keepers of the land” and would only ever sell it to First Nations people.

The Indian Residentia­l Schools Resolution Health Support Program has a hotline to help residentia­l school survivors and their relatives suffering with trauma invoked by the recall of past abuse. The number is 1-866-925-4419.

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 ?? LIAM RICHARDS THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Elder and residentia­l school survivor Jenny Spyglass, right, hugs Karen Whitecalf, project lead for the school ground search in Delmas, Sask., embrace Saturday at the site where ground-penetratin­g radar is being used to search for unmarked graves.
LIAM RICHARDS THE CANADIAN PRESS Elder and residentia­l school survivor Jenny Spyglass, right, hugs Karen Whitecalf, project lead for the school ground search in Delmas, Sask., embrace Saturday at the site where ground-penetratin­g radar is being used to search for unmarked graves.

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