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| Abuse in Canada ![]() Rosie Goldsmith (right) with Freddy Pratt, land manager of the Gordon Reserve in Canada's far north By Rosie Goldsmith I reached the Gordon Reserve after a long, dangerous drive across the snow-covered prairies. It was minus thirty-five degrees. I was scraping off the ice from inside and outside of the car.
Freddy Pratt, the land manager of the Gordon tribe met me and showed me around. We stood in the snow and he pointed to an empty space: "A couple of years ago the school here was levelled. People thought a lot of the pain would go away that way." When Gordon School was closed by the government, it was the last residential school for indigenous children in Canada. It was in the schools that the abuse - by the clerics and lay people who ran them - took place. Indian children had been removed from their families and traditional lifestyles to be boarded in these special schools since the nineteenth century.
The schools were also riddled with abuse - sexual, physical and emotional. And the children, now adults, some already deceased, are finally coming out with their stories after decades of silence and pain.
In 1990 a First Nations Grand Chief, Phil Fontaine, was the first to speak publicly about the abuse he had suffered. This encouraged thousands more to do the same. And then the lawsuits against the government and the Christian churches started. There are already six-and-a-half-thousand and the number is expected to double. A whole new legal industry has shot up as a result. This is a tense and expensive time for Canada.
Benny Pratt, along with a couple of hundred other claimants from Gordon, has settled out of court. The administrator of the school, William Starr, has already been found guilty and was imprisoned.
So what about the churches and the federal government? All fingers seem to be pointing in their direction. The federal government which funded and built the schools has admitted that it is ultimately responsible; it has also officially apologised to the First Nations people. It has donated 350 million Canadian dollars to set up a foundation, run by indigenous people themselves, to address the legacy of the schools.
And this is indeed what has begun to happen in Canada: a debate has started, and now the talk is of healing. |
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