Tuesday, May 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

A Long Wait Ends: Justin Trudeau Apologizes To N.L. Residential School Students

IANS, 24 Nov, 2017 01:47 PM

    GOOSE BAY, N.L. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has "humbly" apologized for abuse and cultural losses at residential schools in Newfoundland and Labrador, saying the gesture is part of recognizing "hard truths" Canada must confront as a society.

     

    Speaking at a ceremony with former students in Goose Bay, Trudeau apologized on behalf of the government of Canada and all Canadians to former students at five schools in the province.

     

    He said their parents were promised their children would be cared and provided for and would be safe.

     

    "However we know today that this colonial way of thinking led to practices that led to deep harm," said Trudeau.

     

    He said the children were isolated from their families, uprooted from their communities and stripped of their identity. They were made to feel "irrelevant and inferior" and taught to be "ashamed of who they were and where they were from."

     

    "I humbly stand before you to offer a long-overdue apology ... on behalf of the Government of Canada and all Canadians," said a visibly moved Trudeau.

     

    "To all of you we are sorry."

     

     

    "The kind of thinking that led to the establishment of the residential school system and left deep scars for so many has no place in our society. It was unacceptable then and it is unacceptable now."

     

    The former students were left out of a compensation package and national apology in 2008 by former prime minister Stephen Harper. His Conservative government argued that Ottawa didn't oversee those schools, but the Liberal government offered last year to settle a class-action lawsuit for $50 million.

     

    The crowd gathered Friday at an auditorium in Goose Bay cheered both Trudeau and Toby Obed, who accepted the prime minister's apology on behalf of school survivors.

     

    Obed approached the stage with his arms raised in triumph, and became overcome with emotion as he spoke.

     

    "Because I come from a patient and forgiving culture I think it is proper for us to accept an apology from the Government of Canada," said Obed.

     

    "This apology is an important part of the healing. Today the survivors in Newfoundland and Labrador we can finally feel a part of the community of survivors nation-wide across Canada. We have connected with the rest of Canada — we got our apology."

     

    Obed thanked Trudeau and the minister of Crown-Indigenous relations, Carolyn Bennett, for coming to Labrador and giving an apology "we deserve."

     

    "And it's in person, it was not on the news. We didn't have to go out to them, they came to us," Obed said to applause.

     

    However Innu leaders boycotted event and won't accept the apology, saying Innu children suffered in other places besides residential schools.

     

     

    The leaders issued a statement saying they met with members of their community on Thursday and received a clear message.

     

    "The response from members of our community has been quite emotional, it is clear that Innu need apologies for more than the experience in the International Grenfell Association run residential school dormitories," Grand Chief Gregory Rich said in the statement.

     

    "I’m not satisfied that Canada understands yet what it has done to Innu and what it is still doing.”

     

    The statement says Innu children were abused in Roman Catholic schools and in the homes of teachers and missionaries in the communities of Sheshatshiu and Davis Inlet. It said governments haven't recognized that.

     

    "The truth of what happened to the past generations of Innu has never been fully documented and we can’t deal with this in bits and pieces," said Chief Eugene Hart of the Sheshatshiu Innu First Nation.

     

    There were stacked boxes of Kleenex leading into the auditorium where Trudeau arrived early Friday.

     

    Hundreds of former residential school students, many of them in ceremonial Inuit and Innu dress, hugged each other as they waited for the event to begin.

     

    Miriam Saunders of Goose Bay, whose daughter Loretta was murdered in Halifax in 2014 by a man she had sublet her apartment to, said abuse and cultural losses at residential schools had ripple effects.

     

    "I didn't want to come here," she said Friday outside the auditorium.

     

    Saunders said the scope of the class-action settlement caused confusion and deep hurt because of those it left out.

     

    Saunders attended the residential school in North West River near Goose Bay from 1971 to 1974. She was 12 when she first arrived.

     

    Saunders said she was sexually abused by a female and a male staff member. Still, she considers those years among the happiest of her life.

     

    "I wanted to get married and live in North West River."

     

    Saunders received both general and abuse compensation. But she said it was her father and others who attended the schools before 1949 who suffered far worse.

     

    "He was beaten," she said of her father, who went to the Makkovik school and later refused to teach her Inuktitut to spare her a similar fate.

     

    The $50-million class-action settlement reached with Ottawa last year did not include students who attended before Newfoundland joined Confederation in 1949. Before then, it was a separate dominion.

     

    "The British government should be apologizing," Saunders said.

     

    Several health workers were on hand Friday to offer emotional support.

     

    Memorial candles were lit in honour of more than 120 former students who died waiting for a resolution to the almost decade-long legal fight.

     

    A striking seal skin backdrop on the auditorium depicted a broken red heart rising to a healed heart on a silver grey seal skin.

     

    It is a piece called The Healing by Rigolet artist Inez Shiwak, designed with her father Jack.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Elementary Teachers' Union Calls For Renaming John A. Macdonald Schools

    Ontario Elementary Teachers' Union Calls For Renaming John A. Macdonald Schools
    The Union Says It Wants The Name Change Because Of What It Calls Macdonald’s Role As The “Architect Of Genocide Against Indigenous Peoples.”

    Ontario Elementary Teachers' Union Calls For Renaming John A. Macdonald Schools

    B.C. Study Says Kids Not Eating Enough Veggies, Fruit, Dairy During School Hours

    B.C. Study Says Kids Not Eating Enough Veggies, Fruit, Dairy During School Hours
    VANCOUVER — Parents tasked with preparing school lunches might reach for convenient packaged foods, but the author of a new study says kids across Canada aren't eating enough nutritious food during school hours.

    B.C. Study Says Kids Not Eating Enough Veggies, Fruit, Dairy During School Hours

    Police Identify Over 90 Persons Of Interest In Burnaby Teen Marrisa Shen's Homicide

    Police Identify Over 90 Persons Of Interest In Burnaby Teen Marrisa Shen's Homicide
    BURNABY, B.C. — Police say they have identified more than 90 persons of interest involving the homicide investigation of a 13-year-old girl found dead in a suburban Vancouver park.

    Police Identify Over 90 Persons Of Interest In Burnaby Teen Marrisa Shen's Homicide

    Surrey Man Wanted In Connection With Violent Domestic Assault

    Surrey Man Wanted In Connection With Violent Domestic Assault
    Surrey RCMP is asking for the public’s assistance in locating a man wanted after an alleged domestic assault incident in the Newton area of Surrey.

    Surrey Man Wanted In Connection With Violent Domestic Assault

    Inmate Serving Time For Car Theft Dies At Matsqui Institution In Abbotsford

    Inmate Serving Time For Car Theft Dies At Matsqui Institution In Abbotsford
    Shawn Lindstrom was serving two years for possession of property obtained by crime and vehicle theft.

    Inmate Serving Time For Car Theft Dies At Matsqui Institution In Abbotsford

    WATCH: Racist SkyTrain Confrontation Caught On Camera In Burnaby

    WATCH: Racist SkyTrain Confrontation Caught On Camera In Burnaby
    An investigation is underway after several videos were posted on social media of what Metro Vancouver Transit Police say was a confrontation involving "profane and racially slanted language."

    WATCH: Racist SkyTrain Confrontation Caught On Camera In Burnaby