Times Colonist

Will dioceses raise money promised to school survivors?

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

OTTAWA — When 48 Catholic church entities signed on to fundraise $25 million for survivors under the Indian Residentia­l Schools Settlement Agreement, it was spelled out they would do so through their “best efforts.”

Ken Young puts it another way. “It was a weasel clause,” the former Manitoba regional chief of the Assembly of First Nations said. “And they used it.”

In total, the campaign raised less than $4 million. It made up one piece of the compensati­on package Catholic entities agreed to pay under the settlement struck in 2006 with Ottawa, former students and Indigenous leaders. Nine years later, a Saskatchew­an judge ruled that the church bodies, who had sought to relieve themselves of their remaining obligation­s, could indeed walk away.

“They said: ‘We used our best efforts and we failed,’ ” recalled Young, who is himself a survivor of residentia­l schools.

“I was disappoint­ed.” That history set the stage for a new promise Canadian bishops made last September that dioceses would put $30 million toward initiative­s that offer healing opportunit­ies for residentia­l school survivors, their relatives and larger communitie­s.

The discovery last year of what are believed to be hundreds of unmarked graves at former schools in Western Canada also shone a fresh spotlight on the failures of Catholic entities to raise the funds for survivors in the past.

Now, bishops are preparing for the impending arrival of Pope Francis, who is expected to apologize for the Roman Catholic Church’s role in operating residentia­l schools. Catholic leaders are seeking donations to help support his visit, including through the sale of what a spokeswoma­n said will be “modest quantities” of T-shirts, hats and bandanas.

“Any small profits will be directed towards the papal visit and the ongoing healing and reconcilia­tion journey,” said Laryssa Waler.

While the Vatican is thought to hold considerab­le wealth, fundraisin­g for reconcilia­tion has been undertaken by Canadian Catholic entities. Leaders say the church in Canada has a decentrali­zed structure, meaning decisions are made by individual dioceses.

Bishops are members of a national assembly called the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. The group has said it wasn’t a party to the original settlement where the “best efforts” fundraiser originated, but nonetheles­s acknowledg­ed its failure and said it drew important lessons from what happened.

Those lessons, the conference said, prompted it to establish the Indigenous Reconcilia­tion Fund and appoint Indigenous board members to oversee it.

The fund, registered as a charity in March, is accepting contributi­ons as well as reviewing proposals for where money could go, the conference said.

The organizati­on has also promised to provide public updates on the progress made toward the $30-million target, which it has pledged to reach by January 2027. On Monday, it announced that dioceses have contribute­d $4.6 million to the fund so far.

For Archbishop of Regina Don Bolen, who oversees a diocese that includes 25 First Nations communitie­s, it’s all about building relationsh­ips and prioritizi­ng the work of reconcilia­tion. “We said we’re making a financial commitment.”

The archdioces­e has set a goal of contributi­ng $2 million, and has raised $1.5 million so far, he said. As part of its efforts, the archdioces­e put on hold a multimilli­on-dollar campaign to fund cathedral renovation­s and a pastoral centre.

Instead, Bolen recalled, church leaders decided to “approach those donors and say: ‘We need to attend to the work of truth and reconcilia­tion first.’ ”

He said like the wider Canadian public, his parishione­rs have over the past few years learned more about the legacy of residentia­l schools.

An estimated 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend the government-funded institutio­ns over a century, and the Catholic Church ran about 60 per cent of them. Many children suffered abuse and neglect.

“In the church, it’s coming to see history in a new way,” Bolen said, “to see the history of Catholic engagement with Indigenous Peoples in a new lens, really attentive to the experience of suffering.”

That heightened awareness, Bolen said, is one the major difference­s he sees between the “best efforts” campaign of the past and the current financial commitment.

“Parishione­rs were not, for the most part, ready to take up that challenge and didn’t see things as many of them do now.”

The federal government announced last week it would provide more than $35 million during the papal visit to Canada to support Indigenous communitie­s, organizati­ons and residentia­l school survivors.

Pope Francis is set to travel to Alberta, Quebec and Nunavut from July 24 to 29.

 ?? ANDREW MEDICHINI, AP ?? Pope Francis will visit Alberta, Quebec and Nunavut from July 24 to 29.
ANDREW MEDICHINI, AP Pope Francis will visit Alberta, Quebec and Nunavut from July 24 to 29.

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