'Like a big jail': Yukoners reflect on painful residential school legacy on Orange Shirt Day - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:43 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

'Like a big jail': Yukoners reflect on painful residential school legacy on Orange Shirt Day

Canadians are remembering the brutal legacy of residential schools Wednesday with the annual Orange Shirt Day.

Orange Shirt Day observed each year on September 30

Johnny Johns is a residential school survivor from Carcross, Yukon. (Mike Rudyk/CBC)

Residential school was "like a big jail" for Carcross Elder Johnny Johns.

Johns,a student at Choutla School in Carcrossin the 1960s, remembers being frequently hungry andcold, and barred from seeinghis sister.

"To this day it was the worst incarceration I have ever had in my entire life," he told CBC's Yukon Morning.

Canadians are remembering the painful legacy of residential schools Wednesday with the annual Orange Shirt Day, which has the slogan "every child matters."The day is meant to raise awareness of residential school history, and honour survivors and victims.

Inclusion Yukon says it hosted anOrange Shirt Day discussion and beading event Tuesday evening with Indigenous facilitators Bobbi Rose Koeand Carissa Waugh, withsupport from the Assembly of First Nations.The idea was forparticipants to learn more about the impacts of residential schoolsand make crafts in recognition of the day.

Yukon had residential schools inCarcross, Whitehorse, Dawson and Shingle Point, and one school in northern British Columbia for Yukon Indigenous students, according to the Yukon Residential Schools Bibliography. The territory's last school closed in the 1970s.

A black and white photo of a large school building with a mountain behind it.
The Chooutla residential school in Carcross, Yukon, 1967 (Yukon Archives)

The Choutla School was run by the Anglican church from 1911 to 1969. The Carcross/Tagish First Nation helped tear down the building in 1993. Last year, survivorsdiscussed what to do with the former school site.

Johns said he had vision problems while at school and couldn't see the blackboard, so "according to them I was the laziest kid ever," he said.

"At night, kids are crying all night long. Hungry, cold. They gave us one blanket," he said.

Johns said children got a second blanket, but were notallowed to use it unless there was a fire. Some childrenused the blanket for warmth and got in trouble, he said.

"Amazing how they can treat people that way," said Johns.

Inclusion Yukon and the Assembly of First Nations supported an Orange Shirt Day beading and discussion workshop on Tuesday evening, says Meriya Gmeiner McPherson. (Laura Howells/CBC)

The Anglican Diocese of Yukon made apublic apology to former Choutla residential school students last year at the request of the Carcross/Tagish First Nation.

Johns said he was put in a group home at age 14 after getting in trouble at the school. He said he was often in jail for drinking as a teen, where he saw many other people from the residential school.

Johnssays Orange Shirt Day is "just another day" for him.

The school "makes you not care," he said.

Assembly of First Nations Yukon Regional ChiefKluane Adamekreleased a statement Wednesday in honour of the day.

"We feel this legacy of the abuses residential school survivors endured, and we recognize the continuing intergenerational trauma that continues to impact Indigenous people to this day," she said.

Adamek said abuse and injustice inresidential schools led to Indigenous children being over-representedin the child welfare system, as well as Indigenous women and girls facing "unacceptable rates of violence across the country."

"We honour and uphold their resiliencyand send strength to the families of the students who did not make it home."

Adamek said the Assembly of First Nationswelcomes the federal bill tabled toestablish aNational Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

With files from Elyn Jones and Mike Rudyk