Judge
calls residential schools a form of genocide
18
February, 2012
WINNIPEG
- The chairman of Canada's truth and reconciliation commission says
removing more than 100,000 aboriginal children from their homes and
placing them in residential schools was an act of genocide.
Justice
Murray Sinclair says the United Nations defines genocide to include
the removal of children based on race, then placing them with another
race to indoctrinate them. He says Canada has been careful to ensure
its residential school policy was not "caught up" in the
UN's definition.
"That's
why the minister of Indian affairs can say this was not an act of
genocide," Sinclair told students at the University of Manitoba
Friday. "But the reality is that to take children away and to
place them with another group in society for the purpose of racial
indoctrination was -- and is -- an act of genocide and it occurs all
around the world."
About
150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Metis children were forced to attend
the government schools over much of the last century. The last school
closed outside Regina in 1996.
The
$60-million truth and reconciliation commission is part of a landmark
compensation deal between the federal government, the Crown and
residential school survivors. It is about halfway through its mandate
and has visited about 500 communities, where it has heard graphic
details of rampant sexual and physical abuse.
The
commission has taken 25,000 statements from survivors so far and has
heard from about 100 people who worked in the schools, Sinclair said.
Their
legacy has left an indelible impact on Canadian society, he added.
The commission has heard stories of survivors continuing the cycle of
abuse with their own children.
Even
those who worked at the schools are not immune. Many of them were
victims, too, and suffer lingering guilt and shame.
"We've
had teachers come forward to us and spoken to the commission ...
about how they so hated the experience of teaching in a residential
school that they quickly left," Sinclair said. "They never
put the fact that they worked at a residential school on their resume
and they always kept that fact hidden from everybody, even from their
own families."
Just
as children of school survivors suffer with their parents' pain, so,
too, do children of those who worked in the schools, Sinclair said.
Children of staff members also attended the schools and still grapple
with what they saw and experienced there. Some watched their parents
become deeply depressed later in life as they came to realize what
they had been a part of.
"In
many ways, they also feel victimized by having been in residential
schools. There is a great mixture of experiences here."
The
commission is expected to release an interim report shortly about
what it's heard so far. But even halfway through its mandate,
Sinclair said, it's clear work will take much longer to complete.
There
are between 200 million and 300 million government documents on
residential schools policy and about 20 million photographs. The
commission has only managed to copy about 14,000 photos for the
record, he said.
Canada
will have to work hard to undo the damage done by the schools long
after the commission has finished its work, Sinclair suggested.
Generations of children -- both aboriginal and non-aboriginal -- have
been brought up on a curriculum that dismissed aboriginal culture and
history as worthless and inferior.
Another
consequence is that there is a spiritual void in many aboriginal
communities, Sinclair added. Churches that once had strong
congregations in aboriginal communities have moved out and elders who
could pass on traditional spiritual teachings are no longer living.
"It
took 130 years to create this problem. It's probably going to take us
130 years to undo it."

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