this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2023
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Rarely do I find a reasonably balanced story on NatPo...

But I'm involved in this story -- I'm a GPR expert and many of my systems are surveying these sites. I largely agree with this article. The narrative and reality diverged.

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[–] ininewcrow@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Both my parents attended residential schools in northern Ontario.

The debates and discussions about this subject by those that didn't experience these events or lived with the stories told first hand by those who actually lived through it all is aggravating to read. It is a constant debate between academics who have an agenda to either discredit, diminish or dismiss this history.

There are many graves out there ... some could be right next to the schools, some near the churches, some in public cemeteries. Everyone that I know that lived through it all know that many children died needlessly in one way or another and were buried either publicly, secretly or by the families themselves in unmarked graves in the wilderness. All of them died because of these damned schools.

The story written by this rightwing rag newspaper failed to include an actual government report in 1907 that detailed how prevalent childhood death was occurring in these schools and even after the government received these reports, didn't want to do anything about it.

https://definingmomentscanada.ca/bryce100/

2022 marks 100 years since the publication of The Story of a National Crime: An Appeal for Justice to the Indians of Canada, written by Dr. Peter Bryce. Bryce based this significant report on an unreleased survey he had conducted several years earlier of 35 residential schools at the request of the Department of Indian Affairs. At the time, Bryce had served as Chief Medical Officer of the Department of Indian Affairs. Previously he’d been an official of the Ontario Health Department and made a reputation for himself as a pioneer of public health and sanitation policy in Canada.

Dr. Bryce submitted his original report in 1907, Report on the Indian Schools of Manitoba and the Northwest Territories. It detailed the poor health conditions at residential schools in the Prairie provinces. By this point, Dr. Bryce had already submitted recommendations that hospitals be set up on or near reserves to combat the alarmingly high rate of death due to tuberculosis (TB). Indigenous peoples were dying of TB at a rate almost 20 times higher than that of non-Indigenous persons. Dr. Bryce also pushed for better sanitation in residential schools.

Dr. Bryce’s 1907 report highlighted the staggering death rates at the schools. At one institution, the File Hills Colony residential school in Saskatchewan, the physician found that 69% of students who had attended the school had died either while there or shortly after – almost all from tuberculosis. He concluded that these deaths resulted from the poor conditions and lack of sanitation within the schools. His report made it clear that the federal government was directly responsible for the appalling living conditions.