Madam Chair, survivors, families and communities were shaken once again by the discovery of 215 children in unmarked graves in Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc at the Kamloops Indian Residential School: the largest school in the Indian Affairs residential school system.
I want to extend my sympathies to the community, survivors and families. I lift you up today and every day.
Unfortunately, this tragedy is not the first time we have discovered the remains of little children around these schools. Acts of genocide were more the norm and not the exception. According to the TRC, at least 40% to 60% of children who attended these schools died. Sometimes, according to Mary-Ellen Kelm, it was as a result of having been purposely exposed to infections such as TB, spreading the disease through the school population. Former TRC commissioner Murray Sinclair has said that he believes the death count could be much higher due to the schools' poor burial records.
These are the sacred lives of children exposed to acts of genocide, often to never return home. Families were left without answers about where their loved ones were, like at Brandon Residential School. The bodies of more than 50 children were discovered on the institution's grounds in 2019. It is now being used as a private campground, and survivors and impacted family members, including Jennifer Rattray, are working to find closure, as she stated in a CBC interview today. She said:
The families and communities whose children were lost while attending these schools have questions that deserve answers. The children buried at these sites must have their identities restored and their stories told. They will never be forgotten.
Can members imagine having to ask permission to honour the remains of children who perished as a result of genocide?
The fact is that genocide against indigenous people is so normalized that it actually needs to be discussed. Even in death, our children are disrespected and disregarded. Families, survivors and communities need closure, and the spirits of our lost children need to be nurtured. They need to be put to rest. They need peace.
We need to act now. At the very least, we need to heed the 94 calls to action and support them with adequate funding, including calls to action 71 to 76. We need to fund nations so they can complete their own radar ground searches at all Indian residential school sites. This is supported by the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations, Long Plain First Nation, Pimicikamak Cree Nation, AFN and so many others.
We need to block off all residential school sites immediately as active crime scenes so that indigenous nations, survivors and families can decide how they want to proceed in their searches for their loved ones. These should be treated like crime scenes, according to Chief Dennis Meeches from Long Plain First Nation.
We must stop fighting residential school survivors, including those from St. Anne's, and provide emergency and ongoing support for survivors, families and communities who continue to deal with this trauma as a result of the residential school system.
We need to recognize what happened as a genocide, not as a cultural genocide. It meets the criteria of genocide under the UN Genocide Convention.
We need this government and all members of Parliament to support us in bringing our children home. Please allow us to have that justice, to get that closure and bring our children home.