Siksika Nation pays tribute to residential school survivors with convoy on Canada Day - Action News
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Siksika Nation pays tribute to residential school survivors with convoy on Canada Day

A convoy between two residential schools took place in lieu of a celebration of Canada Day on the Siksika Reserve east of Calgary, as a tribute to members who attended them.

Many communities and First Nations cancelled Canada Day this year, opting to reflect instead of celebrate.

3 years ago
Duration 2:58
A special tribute at Siksika Nation east of Calgary, was organized to acknowledge the hurts of the past and express hope for the future.

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.


A convoy between two residential schools took place in lieu of a celebration of Canada Day on the Siksika Reserveas a tribute to memberswho attended themas the country grapples with the findings of unmarked graves at former residential schools.

The convoy of cars and trucksstartedat the site of the old Crowfoot Indian Residential School, which was torn down two years ago.

Siksika Nation Chief Ouray Crowfoot, council members and speakers addressed attendees, who were invited to wear orange instead of red or white to honour Indigenous children affectedby residential schools.

"I attended the Crowfoot Indian Residential School for 14 years," speaker Ruth Scalp Lock told the crowd.

"Most of the time, while I was here, it was all very negative. I experienced so much abuse in all forms. And when I left, I couldn't even express myself."

Ruth Scalp Lock speaks about her experience at the Crowfoot Indian Residential School. (Terri Trembath/CBC)

Over 100 people taking partthen travelled to the Old Sun School now the Old Sun Community College where residential school survivors and Siksika Nation membersspoke.

Former Siksika chief Vincent Yellow Old Woman shared his memory of running away.

"We got caught, and they brought us back here," he said."And when we got back here, they punished us."

Blessings alsotook place at each location.

'It was genocide'

Myrna McMaster, 64,who was also forced to attend Crowfoot school as a child,said she usually does not recognize Canada Day.

"I always said, I'm sorry to use that term, but it was a white person's holiday," McMaster said.

This year, many Canadians also opted to forgo celebration.

Special events normally planned for July 1 were either cancelled or scaled back in many places across the country, after the discovery of remains in unmarked graves at residential school sites in British Columbia and Saskatchewan.

'It was genocide, what was going on in these schools,' Chief Ouray Crowfoot said. (Terri Trembath/CBC Calgary)

But McMastersaid listeningto the stories of other survivorsis a healing experience.

"I am so happy to see the number of people that came out to support this, the non-native people," McMaster said.

"This is an educational thing for them to learn about us. This is for the people that are gone, like my parents and my grandparents. Today, they're being acknowledged."

Crowfoot said all of Canada had been impacted by the discoveries, and stressed that residential school survivors and Siksika Nation members should look after their mental health.

"It was genocide, what was going on in these schools," Crowfoot said.

"The ones that survived packed that stuff away, and put it down. Now that baggage is coming up, too."

Siksika Nation said it is also in the process of working with ground-penetratingradar technicians to determine if there are human remains at its old residential schools.

"This most important part is for the government and the churches to acknowledge what happened," McMaster said.


Support is available for anyone affected by residential schools, and those who are triggered by the latest reports.

A national Indian Residential School Crisis Line has been set up to provide support for formerstudents and those affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by calling the24-hour national crisis line: 1-866-925-4419.

TheIndian Residential School Survivors Society(IRSSS)can be contacted toll-freeat1-800-721-0066.

With files from Terri Trembath