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New macabre discoveries near a boarding school for natives in Canada

2023-01-13T00:26:15.539Z


An indigenous community in western Canada announced on Thursday January 12 that it had in turn discovered possible anonymous graves and a child's bone...


An indigenous community in western Canada announced on Thursday January 12 that it had in turn discovered possible anonymous graves and a child's bone near a Canadian residential school for indigenous people.

For a year and a half, more than 1,300 children's graves have been found near these institutions where indigenous children were forcibly enrolled, causing a shock wave in the country and a national awareness of the dark colonial past.

In Lebret, in the province of Saskatchewan, a radar has made it possible to discover nearly

"2,000

suspicious areas" which must be the subject of a thorough search, explained Thursday the Cree community of Star Blanket.

A precise quantification of the number of graves is still impossible before further investigations because each

"zone"

is not necessarily synonymous with anonymous burial, said Sheldon Poitras, who conducted the research.

However, a fragment of the jaw bone of a child dating from around 125 years was also discovered, the

"material proof of the presence of an unmarked burial"

, noted Sheldon Poitras.

“Our hearts are heavy today.

It's unimaginable

,” said community leader Michael Starr.

It was on the advice of former students of the boarding school that the research areas were selected near this boarding school administered by the Catholic Church and open until 1998.

"The work has only just begun"

On Thursday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called the announcement

"difficult"

and admitted that

"the work has only just begun

," pledging government help every step of the way.

For the Minister of Indigenous Services, Marc Miller,

"the discovery of the bones of a very young child on the site of the Lebret residential school is a tragic reminder of Canada's painful history and the heinous acts that were committed in the boarding schools”

.

Between the end of the 19th century and the 1990s, some 150,000 indigenous children were forcibly enrolled in 139 boarding schools across the country, where they were cut off from their family, language and culture.

Thousands never came back.

A national commission of inquiry had qualified in 2015 this system of

“cultural genocide”

.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2023-01-13

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