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Anonymous Anonymous said...

1 - As the anonymous poster who originated this comment, I appreciate you giving this wider attention. The impact of the Residential School System on our First Nations brothers and sisters needs to be made known to the wider Canadian community. Especially as its effects are still felt within Canadian society today, particularly among First Nations peoples.

2 - Yes I was responding to Michele Tittler.

3 - Over the past 25 years I have been a member of the Reform Party, Alliance, and Conservative Party. So my politics are decidedly conservative. I am also a devout Christian who attends church every week.

I have visited the archives at the college in Sault Ste Marie where records are kept of the Residential School System, and I have visited the graveyard behind the college where First Nations children as young as five and six (if I recall correctly) are buried. Some in unmarked graves. It is not a pleasant experience as a mostly white Canadian and a devout Christian (given that the churches were complicit with the government).

Before judging our First Nations brothers and sisters because of the extra challenges they have faced historically within Canadian society, and I would argue still face today, I would invite anyone, regardless or race or religion or political persuasion, to spend a day in Sault Ste Marie going through all the photos and stories as well as visiting the largely forgotten graveyard of young children torn from the arms of their parents and community by government officials and shipped off to government schools administered by the national churches. All for the reason of culturally whitewashing these young, innocent children.

It's horrible.

No disrespect toward my African-American brothers and sisters or what they suffered, but we as Canadians have no business judging Americans over slavery given what we inflicted upon First Nations peoples through Canada's Residential School system. Or the latent racism toward First Nations people that we continue to tolerate in Canada today (whereas Canadians generally don't tolerate racism against other minority groups in my personal opinion).

Again, thank-you for this opportunity to shed some light on this subject. If you would permit me one more kindness, I would invite ARC readers interested in discovering more to visit the Shingwauk Archive Project at Algoma University: http://www.shingwauk.org/srsc/

26 January 2017 at 06:15

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