BishopAccountability.org
 
  Indian Residential Schools an ‘education Policy Gone Wrong,’ Not ‘genocide,’ Says Aboriginal Affairs Minister

APTN
October 27, 2011

http://aptn.ca/pages/news/2011/10/27/residential-schools-not-genocide-conservatives-commission-stained-glass-tribute/



The Indian residential schools school system was not an act of genocide, but the product of an “education policy gone wrong,” said Aboriginal Affairs Minister John Duncan Thursday during an announcement that his government would be installing a stained glass window on Parliament Hill in honour of the system’s survivors.

Duncan, however, said the system may have been “lethal” to Aboriginal culture if it had continued to exist.

“I don’t view it that way (as an act of cultural genocide), but it was certainly very negative to the retention of culture and if it had extended for another generation or two it might have been lethal, yes,” said Duncan.

The federal government, with the help of the RCMP, forcibly seized Aboriginal children away from their parents and put them into church-run residential schools where they were forbidden to speak their native languages and often faced physical and sexual abuse.

Some of the children died at the schools, mostly from sickness and disease, but also from beatings.

Many of these children’s bodies were buried in unmarked graves.

University of Manitoba professor Christopher Powell recently published a book arguing that Indian residential schools fit the definition of an act of genocide because the aim was to wipe out a culture.

“Canadians like to think we are a moral country, that we are good guys. A lot of Canadians recognize that the residential schools were painful, that there was abuse,” said Powell, in a recent interview with APTN National News. “But there isn’t still a widespread recognition that they were part of a systematic attempt to eliminate by force Aboriginal culture.”

In 1920, the deputy superintendent for the formerly named Indian Affairs department said the aim of residential schools was to “get rid of the Indian problem” in Canada forever.

“I want to get rid of the Indian problem,” said Scott. “Our objective is to continue until there is not a single Indian in Canada that has not been absorbed into the body politic and there is no Indian question and no Indian department.”

Under Scott, it became mandatory for all children between seven and 15 to attend residential schools.

Duncan announced that the Conservative government would be commissioning a stain glass window designed by an Aboriginal artist for installation by the Parliament Hill entrance where MPs enter Centre Block. Centre Block home to the House of Commons chamber where MPs debate and pass the laws of the land.

“As we are all aware, the history of residential schools tells of an education policy gone wrong,” said Duncan. “Going forward our government will continue to work with all willing partners to strengthen education outcomes.”

Duncan said his department would be paying an expert panel to recommend an Aboriginal artist, or artists to create the window.

The price for the project, however, is still unknown, but it would be installed sometime next year, said Duncan.

“We don’t know the size of the expert panel yet, we don’t know what they are going to recommend,” said Duncan.

Duncan said the window was his idea after “a lot of conversations” he had with people in the “Aboriginal community” since Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s apology to residential school survivors on June 11, 2008.

The government also created the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to travel the country and gather the stories of residential school survivors.

Part of the history of residential schools, however, may never be known.

Between 1954 and 1956, Indian Affairs set up “Document Destruction Teams” that pulped accident reports, inspector reports and principals’ diaries.

The teams also destroyed monthly and yearly reports by school and department officials in targeted purges, according to a 2006 study into missing residential school files.

Duncan said Assembly of First Nations National Chief Shawn Atleo and Mary Simon, president of Inuit organization Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, supported the stained glass project.

Duncan said that another panel created to study First Nations education would be issuing their report in December of January. He also that Prime Minister Stephen Harper would be meeting with First Nations leaders next year.

 
 

Any original material on these pages is copyright © BishopAccountability.org 2004. Reproduce freely with attribution.