Canada - Remains of children found at former residential schools in Canada, May 2021

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What???
This is unbelievable!! What an outraged news!
This is not possible,how can they do this??!!

Victims, who seek closure and acknowledge for what happened to them are getting, again - stonewalled.
Such a so cold-hearted,ice cold -block!

Outrages and very rigid. There must be a way or they must create a way.
 
May 29 2022
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''WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

A year after the discovery of what are believed to be 215 unmarked graves at the former Kamloops residential school, First Nations across the country continue to search the grounds of residential schools where children from their communities went.

That includes ground searches underway at many of the 14 residential school sites in Manitoba.

After last May's discovery in Kamloops, survivors from Sandy Bay First Nation, on the western shore of Lake Manitoba, held a four-day vigil at the community's elders' centre and lit a sacred fire.

"Throughout those four days, the elders shared stories of their time in the residential school that they had in our community," said Sandy Bay Coun. Randal Roulette.

"The possibility of unmarked graves became part of the discussion," he said. "The general consensus was that they did want to do a ground search."

''Ongoing searches in Manitoba​

Searches are also ongoing in Manitoba at Cross Lake Residential School in Cross Lake, Fort Alexander Residential School in Sagkeeng First Nation, Pine Creek Residential School in Camperville and at the Brandon Residential School.
A search was also started at McKay Residential School in Dauphin.

The McKay Residential School (sometimes spelled as MacKay Residential School) had two locations: the one in Dauphin, which opened in 1957 and closed in 1969, and one near The Pas and Opaskwayak Cree Nation on Fisher Island, that ran from 1914 to 1933.''


''
 
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June 17 2022
''WARNING: This story contains details that are disturbing.

Manitoba RCMP have charged a 92-year-old Winnipeg man in connection with alleged sexual abuse that happened at a residential school more than 50 years ago.

Retired Father Arthur Masse of Winnipeg was arrested on Thursday and charged with one count of indecent assault in connection with an allegation of sexual abuse that is said to have happened at Fort Alexander Residential School.

RCMP said the alleged incident occurred between 1968 and 1970, and involved a 10-year-old female student at the school.

The charge has not been proven in court.

Masse was released with conditions and will appear in court in Powerview, Man. on July 20.

RCMP received the tip about the alleged abuse in February 2010, with an official investigation beginning in 2011.

The school was opened in 1905 in the community of Fort Alexander, which later became Sagkeeng First Nation, and closed in 1970.

The Indian Residential Schools Resolution Health Support Program has a hotline to help residential school survivors and their relatives suffering from trauma invoked by the recall of past abuse. The number is 1-866-925-4419.

This is a developing story. More details to come.''

With files from The Canadian Press
 
CBC News: Why these survivors and advocates want more than an apology from the Pope.


CFWE: More tickets available for Pope Francis visit to Edmonton.


Chief representing Sask. First Nations has 'no clue' how tickets for Pope's visit were allocated

 
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''OTTAWA — The assembly of Catholic bishops organizing Pope Francis’s visit to Canada, where he is expected to apologize for the church’s role in residential schools, is soliciting donations from those hoping to see him.''

“Please see how inappropriate this is,” the national chief wrote in a recent letter to the Archbishop of Edmonton Richard Smith.
“We as First Nations people are all intergenerational trauma survivors, and we are collectively grieving the pain and suffering that Catholic-run institutions of assimilation and genocide perpetrated.”

Archibald says the intent of the papal visit is to focus on reconciliation and “it is ill-time to advance church fundraising efforts.”

She added it is “especially hurtful to ask First Nations survivors, to whom church reparations are already owed, to donate.”
 
''July 24, 2022 6:59AM EDT
When Pope Francis arrives in Canada and is expected to beg forgiveness for Catholic-run residential schools, a team of translators will be dedicated to making sure no words are lost for those receiving the apology.
Henry Pitawanakwat, from the Three Fires Confederacy of Manitoulin Island in Ontario, is on that team and will translate the Pope's words into the Ojibwa language.
His mother was a residential school survivor, which he says also impacted him, and as a youth, he also suffered abuse from members of the Jesuits.''


''Francis, who is from Argentina, speaks Spanish, so Pitawanakwat says another interpreter will translate what the Pope says into English before he and other interpreters translate those words into a dozen Indigenous languages.

Web links for each language will then be available for people to listen to the translations in real-time.''
 

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