Search reveals 169 potential unmarked graves at former Canadian residential school, officials say
(CNN)Officials uncovered 169 potential unmarked graves on the grounds of a former Catholic residential school in Canada, an Indigenous tribe in Alberta said Tuesday.
The
Kapawe'no First Nation, which is located over 200 miles northwest of
Edmonton, said the discovery was made at the former St. Bernard Mission
School at the Grouard Mission site. The potential graves were identified
using ground-penetrating radar (GPR) and drone imagery, officials said.
The
residential school was one of several in Canada that thousands of
mostly Indigenous children were forced to attend after being separated
from their families between the 19th century and the 1990s. At least
150,000 Indigenous children from across the country were affected by the
practice, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said.
"We
remember the devastation our people felt when our children were
forcibly removed from their families, communities to be placed in Indian
residential schools," Kapawe'no Chief Sydney Halcrow said during a news
conference Tuesday. "We can start our journey of healing our identities
that they fought so hard to take from us."
Halcrow
said information from survivors, community members and archival records
indicates several children died during their time at the school. The
Catholic Church opened St. Bernard Mission School in 1894 and it closed
in 1961, according to Canada's National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation.
The
investigation to find unmarked graves of children who reportedly died
at the school began in October 2021 through a joint effort from the
Kapawe'no First Nation and the Institute of Prairie and Indigenous
Archaeology (IPIA) at the University of Alberta.
"Hundred
sixty-nine potential graves were identified based on analysis on
anomalies within the GPR data that had characteristics associated with
unmarked graves," IPIA Director Kisha Supernant said.
Over
the course of six days, 115 potential graves were found inside the
existing community cemetery where no grave markers were found, according
to Supernant. Additionally, 54 potential graves were located around the
school property, outside of the cemetery area.
The investigation is expected to continue in two additional phases, Supernant said.
An Indian Residential School Crisis Line is available 24/7 for former students and others affected at 1-866-925-4419.
Hundreds of unmarked graves identified at other schools
The
painful discovery of the potential unmarked graves comes after hundreds
of Indigenous children's remains were found at several sites last year
amid a reckoning of how Canada had treated First Nations communities.
Estimates
indicate more than 4,000 children died while in residential schools
over a period of several decades, Canada's Truth and Reconciliation
Commission wrote in a 2015 report
on the legacy of the residential school system. It detailed decades of
physical, sexual and emotional abuse suffered by children in government
and church-run institutions.
"These
residential schools were created for the purpose of separating
Aboriginal children from their families, in order to minimize and weaken
family ties and cultural linkages, and to indoctrinate children into a
new culture -- the culture of the legally dominant Euro-Christian
Canadian society," the report said.
In May 2021, the Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc community confirmed remains of 215 children
who attended the Kamloops Indian Residential School were found. A month
later, the Cowessess First Nation in Saskatchewan announced the
discovery of at least 750 unmarked graves on the grounds of the former Marieval Indian Residential School.
In British Columbia, 182 human remains in
unmarked graves were found in July 2021 at the site of the former St.
Eugene's Mission School near the city of Cranbrook, the Lower Kootenay
Band, a member band of the Ktunaxa Nation, said.
Last
year, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops apologized for its
role in the residential school system and expressed "profound remorse."
"We
acknowledge the grave abuses that were committed by some members of our
Catholic community; physical, psychological, emotional, spiritual,
cultural, and sexual," the organization said in a statement.
"We also sorrowfully acknowledge the historical and ongoing trauma and
the legacy of suffering and challenges faced by Indigenous Peoples that
continue to this day."
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