Historic
Day of Apology to Métis Residential School
Survivors
Friday,
June 13, 2008 -- MNO Press Release
OTTAWA --- Métis people
from across the country took part in a long-awaited
apology to the survivors of Indian Residential
Schools on Wednesday afternoon at the House of
Commons.
“I stand before you today
to offer an apology to former students of Indian
Residential Schools. The treatment of children
in Indian Residential Schools is a sad chapter
in our history,” opened Prime Minister Stephen
Harper.
Countless Métis children
attended residential schools across Canada, forcing
them to leave behind their families, languages,
cultures and traditions. As well as being separated
from everything familiar, many children were victims
of mental, physical, emotional and sexual abuse.
The assimilation and abuse of Métis children
has caused decades of profound damage to Métis
people and their culture.
“The effects of residential
schools are devastating to Métis people
on an intergenerational level,” said Gary
Lipinski, President of the Métis Nation
of Ontario (MNO). “Survivors and their families
have been burdened by the memories of residential
schools for far too long. I hope this apology
will assist in lifting that burden.”
Acknowledging this horrific
piece of Aboriginal and Canadian history is the
first step in moving forward on a positive and
mutually respectful relationship between Métis
people and the Federal Government. This apology
is not the answer; it is merely a beginning to
the healing process.
“Métis people still
live in fear of residential schools,” said
France Picotte, MNO Chair. “The reality
of what happened in those schools is a contributing
factor to why Métis people have spent generations
hiding their identity. I hope that this historic
day will allow the healing process to begin for
all Métis people.”
The Métis are a distinct
Aboriginal people with a unique culture, language
and heritage, and with an ancestral Homeland that
centers around Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan,
Alberta, British Columbia, parts of the Northwest
Territories, as well as the northwestern United
States. The Métis played an instrumental
role in the shaping of Canada, and work tirelessly
to share their culture, music, traditions and
knowledge of the environment with their fellow
Canadians. Today, the Métis live, work,
raise their families and pay taxes in communities
all across Canada.
For further information:
Chelsey Quirk
Communications Officer
613-798-1488
613-299-6085
chelseyq@metisnation.org
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