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preface.txt
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Preface
=======
Canada’s residential school system for Aboriginal children was an education
system in name only for much of its existence. These residential schools were
created for the purpose of separating Aboriginal children from their families,
in order to minimize and weaken family ties and cultural linkages, and to
indoctrinate children into a new culture—the culture of the legally dominant
Euro-Christian Canadian society, led by Canada’s first prime minister, Sir John
A. Macdonald. The schools were in existence for well over 100 years, and many
successive generations of children from the same communities and families
endured the experience of them. That experience was hidden for most of Canada’s
history, until Survivors of the system were finally able to find the strength,
courage, and support to bring their experiences to light in several thousand
court cases that ultimately led to the largest class-action lawsuit in Canada’s
history.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada was a commission like no other
in Canada. Constituted and created by the Indian Residential Schools Settlement
Agreement, which settled the class actions, the Commission spent six years
travelling to all parts of Canada to hear from the Aboriginal people who had
been taken from their families as children, forcibly if necessary, and placed
for much of their childhoods in residential schools.
This volume is a summary of the discussion and findings contained in the
Commission’s final multi-volume report. The Final Report discusses what the
Commission did and how it went about its work, as well as what it heard, read,
and concluded about the schools and afterwards, based on all the evidence
available to it. This summary must be read in conjunction with the Final Report.
The Commission heard from more than 6,000 witnesses, most of whom survived the
experience of living in the schools as students. The stories of that experience
are sometimes difficult to accept as something that could have happened in a
country such as Canada, which has long prided itself on being a bastion of
democracy, peace, and kindness throughout the world. Children were abused,
physically and sexually, and they died in the schools in numbers that would not
have been tolerated in any school system anywhere in the country, or in the
world.
But, shaming and pointing out wrongdoing were not the purpose of the
Commission’s mandate. Ultimately, the Commission’s focus on truth determination
was intended to lay the foundation for the important question of reconciliation.
Now that we know about residential schools and their legacy, what do we do about
it?
Getting to the truth was hard, but getting to reconciliation will be harder. It
requires that the paternalistic and racist foundations of the residential school
system be rejected as the basis for an ongoing relationship. Reconciliation
requires that a new vision, based on a commitment to mutual respect, be
developed. It also requires an understanding that the most harmful impacts of
residential schools have been the loss of pride and self-respect of Aboriginal
people, and the lack of respect that non-Aboriginal people have been raised to
have for their Aboriginal neighbours. Reconciliation is not an Aboriginal
problem; it is a Canadian one. Virtually all aspects of Canadian society may
need to be reconsidered. This summary is intended to be the initial reference
point in that important discussion. Reconciliation will take some time.