Monday, January 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. man says son conceived in residential school abuse, both sue church

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2025 12:01 PM
  • B.C. man says son conceived in residential school abuse, both sue church

A British Columbia father and son are suing the Anglican Church of Canada, alleging the son was conceived as a result of sexual abuse by a female employee of St. Michael's Indian Residential School in Alert Bay in the late 1960s. 

The lawsuit says the father was 14 years old when he was victimized by a school supervisor in 1968, and he settled a lawsuit with the church in 2008 over the alleged sexual assault at the school on Cormorant Island, northeast of Vancouver Island. 

Court documents filed this week in B.C. Supreme Court say the plaintiffs only recently found out they were related, leading to a "traumatic reunion," and their relationship has been confirmed by DNA testing. 

The notice of civil claim says the father, now 72, "had no idea" he had a son that was given up by the woman to a non-Indigenous family months after his birth, and the son, now 56, was traumatized by the "shocking revelation" he was a child conceived through the rape of his biological father.

The lawsuit says the plaintiffs contacted the church this year about compensation, but were allegedly told the church considered itself "completely absolved" of liability due to settlement of the father's earlier legal action. 

The allegations have not been proven in court and the Anglican Church of Canada has not filed a response to the lawsuit, and the plaintiffs' lawyer and the church did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 

The civil claim says the plaintiffs were "left with no choice" but to sue the church for damages in order to "seek closure and healing from these traumatic events."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Defence wraps its case in hockey players' sex assault trial

Defence wraps its case in hockey players' sex assault trial
Defence lawyers representing five hockey players accused of sexual assault closed their case Monday, wrapping up testimony in a trial that has heard from nine witnesses over roughly six weeks, including the complainant and one of the accused.

Defence wraps its case in hockey players' sex assault trial

Hotel spaces freed up in Winnipeg for wildfire evacuees, Alberta dealing with winds

Hotel spaces freed up in Winnipeg for wildfire evacuees, Alberta dealing with winds
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew said Monday hotels in Winnipeg are opening up to thousands of evacuees who have fled their homes due to raging wildfires.

Hotel spaces freed up in Winnipeg for wildfire evacuees, Alberta dealing with winds

Former PM Harper calls for renewed ties with India, does not mention murder probe

Former PM Harper calls for renewed ties with India, does not mention murder probe
Former prime minister Stephen Harper called on Canada to move past its dispute with India, arguing in a speech on Saturday that the country is an indispensable partner in a volatile world.

Former PM Harper calls for renewed ties with India, does not mention murder probe

B.C. provides peek into $2.95B SkyTrain tunnel, set to open in 2027

B.C. provides peek into $2.95B SkyTrain tunnel, set to open in 2027
The British Columbia government has provided a glimpse of progress on the Broadway subway tunnel, which is set to expand Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain capacity significantly in 2027.

B.C. provides peek into $2.95B SkyTrain tunnel, set to open in 2027

Alberta woman allegedly released from jail with fake documents arrested in B.C.

Alberta woman allegedly released from jail with fake documents arrested in B.C.
An Alberta woman who Crown prosecutors say was wrongfully released from an Edmonton area jail with allegedly fake release papers has been arrested in B.C.

Alberta woman allegedly released from jail with fake documents arrested in B.C.

Sikh groups say Ottawa should not invite India's Modi to G7 summit

Sikh groups say Ottawa should not invite India's Modi to G7 summit
Sikh organizations are calling on Ottawa to break with a five-year tradition by not inviting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the G7 summit.

Sikh groups say Ottawa should not invite India's Modi to G7 summit