The Niagara Falls Review

Finding triggered country’s year of reckoning over residentia­l schools

Canada can no longer ignore harsh realities of its past

- DIRK MEISSNER

Percy Casper, 73, spent 10 years as a child at the former Kamloops Indian Residentia­l School in British Columbia.

He has spent the past year grieving.

A member of the Bonaparte Indian Band near Cache Creek, B.C., Casper said he was deeply distraught when he heard the news last May, when Kukpi7 Rosanne Casimir, Tk’emlups te Secwepemc Nation Chief, announced that a war graves expert using ground-penetratin­g radar had located 215 suspected unmarked graves at the site of the former school.

So, Casper grieved, for lost classmates, and for himself. His emotions twisted into a painful knot when Indigenous leaders later visited the Vatican to meet the Pope who represents the church that he says abused him.

But his spirits have been lifted by strangers, he said.

“Families have walked up to me and literally put their hands out and said they were ashamed of who they were on account of what we went through,” he said.

Casper’s emotional journey echoes a year of reckoning for Canada as it confronts the legacy of its residentia­l school system for Indigenous children. The findings in an old apple orchard would reverberat­e from British Columbia’s Interior to Ottawa, the Vatican and beyond.

The discovery represente­d what Casimir called at the time, an “unthinkabl­e loss.” The existence of unmarked graves had been a “knowing” among school survivors and elders, but the high-tech survey represente­d confirmati­on for Canada, she said.

The detection of hundreds more suspected graves connected to residentia­l schools across the country would follow.

Prof. Geoff Bird, an anthropolo­gist at the school of communicat­ion and culture at Victoria’s Royal Roads University, said the unmarked graves represent a profound moment in the nation’s history.

“The discovery of children buried in residentia­l schools across the country was perhaps, I would say, the most traumatic event in recent Canadian history in terms of defining who we are,” Bird said. “When you actually have a discovery such as this, it can’t do anything but impact the nation and its perception of itself.”

Bird, an expert on cultural memory and war heritage, said Canada could not ignore the harsh realities of the residentia­l school experience, even as it grappled with other issues, like climate change or the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

“The whole field of cultural memory is what we remember, what we forget, what we silence,” he said. “We can’t be blind to our own history.”

There have been previous attempts to face that history. A 4,000page report in 2015 by the National Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission detailed harsh mistreatme­nt at residentia­l schools, including emotional, physical and sexual abuse of children, and at least 4,100 deaths at the institutio­ns.

The report cited records of at least 51 children dying at the Kamloops school between 1914 and 1963. Officials in 1918 believed children at the school were not being adequately fed, leading to malnutriti­on, the report noted. But the findings last May would transfix the national gaze in a way that a written report, no matter how grim, could not.

The Kamloops residentia­l school operated between 1890 and 1969, when the federal government took over operations from the Catholic Church and operated it as a day school until it closed in 1978.

“When you look at other nations around the world that have gone through their efforts toward truth and reconcilia­tion these are difficult things to come to terms within a nation’s past,” Bird said.

The moment of reckoning has extended abroad. China, for example, has said Canada should not criticize other nations on human rights, while unmarked graves of missing children were being discovered on its own soil.

“I think those kinds of situations, with, say, China are just examples to dilute the focus on their lack of human rights internally,” Bird said.

On the other hand, a visit to Canada this summer by Pope Francis “will be a powerful and symbolic act,” said Bird. Indigenous leaders visited Francis at the Vatican last month, prompting him to issue an apology for the harm caused by the church at residentia­l schools.

 ?? DIRK MEISSNER THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Percy Casper, a survivor of the former Kamloops residentia­l school, says he had a difficult year following the announceme­nt of the discovery of an unmarked burial site, but found solace in the sympathies of strangers who approached him.
DIRK MEISSNER THE CANADIAN PRESS Percy Casper, a survivor of the former Kamloops residentia­l school, says he had a difficult year following the announceme­nt of the discovery of an unmarked burial site, but found solace in the sympathies of strangers who approached him.

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