More First Nations communities call on the province to investigate Indian day school sites - Action News
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New Brunswick

More First Nations communities call on the province to investigate Indian day school sites

The Chiefs of three of the largest rural First Nations in New Brunswick are calling for the government to launch an investigation into New Brunswicks Indian day schools.

Mawiw Council says First Nations deserve to know the truth about the hidden history behind day schools

Mawiw Council, made up of the three largest rural First Nations communities, is calling on the New Brunswick government to launch an investigation into day schools. From front left: Arren Sock, Chief of Elsipogtog, Ross Perley, Chief of Neqotkuk and Alvery Paul, Chief of Esgenoopetitj. (Mawiw Council)

The chiefs of three of the largest rural First Nations communities in New Brunswick are calling for the government to launch an investigation into the province'sIndian day schools.

Arren Sock, the chief of Elsipogtog First Nation, Alvery Paul, chief of Esgenopetitand Ross Perley, chief of Neqotkuk First Nation, head the Mawiw Council, whichrepresents their communities' joint interests.

They want the government of New Brunswick to take concrete actions to "show First Nations people that their past abuse will not be forgotten and won't be left uncorrected."

"It is imperative to recognize the injustices of the past. As a people, we need healing and forward thinking. Uncovering hidden history is a first step that cannot be taken lightly. The First Nations peoples of New Brunswick deserve the truth," said Paul.

The council saidsignificant Indigenous involvement and oversight is required if an investigation were to take place.

An investigation would also include research into the family history of non-Indigenous peopleas many children were sent to live with settlers in the area.

The callcomes one day before the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, the first time a federal statutory holiday has beendedicated in memory of the lost Indigenous children and survivors of residential schools, their families and communities.

The three First Nations joined the the Wolastoqey Nation in calling for a government investigation and a ground-penetrating radar survey ofIndian day school properties, particularly the former Sussex Indian School. along with the Shubenacadie residential school in Nova Scotia, as many Indigenous people from New Brunswick were sent there.

History of Indian day schools

In the 18th century, the government introduced "Indian Schools,"established to isolate Indigenous children from their families, language and culture.

Early schools pushed a religiousmessage on Indigenous children, who received little in the way of a promised education and were ultimately forced to work as unpaid labourers and domestic servants for the settlers they lived with.

The Sussex Indian Academy in Sussex Vale, which opened in the late-1780s, had the same goals of assimilation into colonial culture that existed in residential schools.The school closed in the late-1820s.

After Confederation in 1867, the federal government funded 12 day schools for Indigenous children that were run by churches. The last one to close was in Metepenagiag in 1992.

Following up on government promises

In June, Premier Blaine Higgs and Minister of Aboriginal Affairs Arlene Dunn made a commitment to "get to the bottom" of what happened at government-run schools for Indigenous children in New Brunswick.

Their comments were made after the news that the Tk'emlps te Secwpemc First Nation found the possible graves of 215 children at the site of a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C.

The discovery of more than 200 possible graves found recently at the residential school site in Kamloops, B.C. has led to calls for investigations at former school sites across the country. (Gary Moore/CBC)

"We will investigate each and every one of these located in New Brunswick," Higgssaid during a message of condolences in the legislature.

On "Resilience Day"in Fredericton in July, Dunn said the government was working to rectify the harm that institutions have caused Indigenous peoples.

At the time, she said government officials had met with Wolastoqey Nation chiefs to discuss an investigation into day schools in the province. It is unclear what progress has been made since then.

Frustration over N.B. decision

New Brunswick is one of the provinces that have chosen not to observe National Day for Truth and Reconciliation as a provincial holiday, choosing to keepschools and government institutions open.

The day of remembranceis one of 94 calls to action in the 2015 calls to actionby the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The Mawiw Council wrote to the province last week, calling for a reverse in the decision to not mark Sept. 30th as a holiday.

Higgs said during the COVID-19 update on Wednesday that the government is moving reconciliation forward in other ways, such as bringing First Nations history into school curriculum and establishing a systemic racism commissioner.

"I'm disappointed if it's seen as a slight in any way, because having more people take a day off is not necessarily going to encourage [them to] learn more about the challenges we're facing together in our country, and how we can manage them together."

With the call for the official commemoration of the National Day for Truth and Reconciliationrejected, the Mawiw Council Indigenous leaders said they are concerned about the state of relations with the provincial government.

"We see the decision as a missed opportunity to repair damaged relations between Indigenous people in the province and the provincial government," said RossPerley. "We believe the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is important to the Truth and Reconciliation process and not recognizing it as a statutory holiday diminishes the importance of that process."

The council said it hopes the government will investigateday schools as an actionable way to continue forward with reconciliation.

"We need to learn from our past mistakes as a society and do whatever is in our power to make sure that we do not forget," said Chief Arren Sock.