Times Colonist

Federal bill would make Sept. 30 holiday for Indigenous reconcilia­tion

- STEPHEN COOK

OTTAWA — Sept. 30 might become a new statutory holiday commemorat­ing victims of residentia­l schools.

The House of Commons heritage committee approved a measure Tuesday to make the last day of September a National Truth and Reconcilia­tion Day. That date is already used as an informal occasion to commemorat­e the experience­s of residentia­l-school students, called Orange Shirt Day.

It’s called that in memory of a piece of a clothing then-six-yearold Phyllis Webstad had taken from her on her first day at a residentia­l school in Williams Lake in 1973.

“We picked Sept. 30 because September was the time when children were taken away from their homes,” she told the committee during a previous session, with the specific day chosen to give teachers time to tell modern children the history of the schools.

The heritage committee added the new federal holiday into NDP MP Georgina Jolibois’s Bill C-369, which creates a National Indigenous Peoples’ Day on June 21.

It has been meeting for the past few months to discuss the bill, hearing testimony from survivors and Indigenous leaders.

Both the Native Women’s Associatio­n of Canada and the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, representi­ng 60,000 Inuit people across Canada, expressed support for two dates.

“Combining a day of celebratio­n with a day of reconcilia­tion, in our view, is inappropri­ate and disrespect­ful,” Virginia Lomax, a lawyer for NWAC, told the group on Jan. 29.

Liberal MP Randy Boissonnau­lt said Tuesday the additions were in keeping with call to action No. 80 from the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, which seeks a statutory holiday “to honour survivors, their families, and communitie­s, and ensure that public commemorat­ion of the history and legacy of residentia­l schools remains a vital component of the reconcilia­tion process.”

The bill has yet to go to the Commons for a final vote.

 ??  ?? Residentia­l school survivor Lorna Standingre­ady is comforted during the closing ceremony of the Indian Residentia­l Schools Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission in Ottawa in 2015.
Residentia­l school survivor Lorna Standingre­ady is comforted during the closing ceremony of the Indian Residentia­l Schools Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission in Ottawa in 2015.

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