12 Modern Indigenous Reality
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Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc Elder Jo-Anne Gottfriedson explains the importance of including loss of language and culture with the Day Scholars Class Action. Originally recorded at the 1L TRC Day, January 31, 2019 on site, in Moccasin Square Gardens (MSG), the restored and functional gymnasium of the KIRS.
Indigenous Peoples have faced many traumas that have compounded over generations. Residential schools, loss of culture, loss of land, loss of childhood, and loss of family are all traumas that many Indigenous People have faced. All of the stories told in the previous section are lived experiences that have greatly impacted not only Indigenous Peoples themselves, but shaped public opinion on Indigenous Peoples.
The historical violence against and dispossession of First Nations Peoples has led to intergenerational trauma. A study found that among 127 residential school Survivors, all but two suffered from mental health issues such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance abuse disorder, major depression, and dysthymic disorder.[1] Studies have also shown that the diets of the children in residential school led to the development of disease, like diabetes, later in life. Some call the combination of these different disorders “Residential School Syndrome”.[2] Modern research also points to the potential for epigenetic changes in human biology in response to trauma that can impact a person’s offspring.[3] The children of those who attended residential schools generally face more negative health outcomes than children of non-attendees.[4]
Intergenerational trauma can be viewed psychologically, socially, and physiologically. It can also be looked at on individual and collective levels. On the individual level is the direct consequences of the parent’s behaviour on the children. For example, if someone is suffering from PTSD, depression, and addiction, they will have a difficult time raising their children in a loving and caring environment. Another way to think about intergenerational trauma is to consider the community-level response to trauma. The loss of culture and the weakening of social structures inhibits a community’s ability to take control over education, child welfare, and policing. The lack of cultural continuity has been linked to higher rates of suicide for Indigenous peoples.[5]
Anti-Indigenous Racism
Anti-Indigenous racism is still highly present in Canadian society. One need only look back to the past year (2020) to see its prevalence.
In addition to the stark and visible acts of racism towards Indigenous Peoples, there is still a heavy presence of unintentional acts of racism, usually through the use of microaggressions. A microaggression is defined as “a subtle but offensive comment or action directed at a member of a marginalized group, especially a racial minority, that is often unintentionally offensive or unconsciously reinforces a stereotype”. [12] This might include actions such as watching an Indigenous Person while they are in a store or holding your purse closer. Those reinforce a stereotype of perceived criminality. There can also be more inadvertent microaggressions that may take the form of a “back handed” compliment. These may be comments like “you are so successful for an Indigenous Person” or “I bet you are the first of your family to go to college, they must be so proud”. Comments like these reinforce the idea that an Indigenous Person does not belong in a certain profession or academic circle. There can also be privileged based microaggressions. This may take the form of “othering” an Indigenous Person due to the pronunciation of their name or the food they eat. Not taking the time to respect the name a person was given because it is “too difficult” or “too strange” is incredibly harmful to a person’s self identity. As we have seen above, the erasure of Indigenous identity has been a substantial theme in Canada’s dark history of the treatment of Indigenous Peoples.
Retraumatization from the Discovery of Mass Graves
On May 27, 2021, the bodies of 215 children were discovered at the Kamloops Indian Residential School.[13] To date, there have been discoveries at 3 residential schools since the announcement in Kamloops. On June 24, 2021, The Cowessess First Nation announced a preliminary finding Thursday of 751 unmarked graves at a cemetery near the former Marieval Indian Residential School. [14] On June 30, 2021, ʔaq̓am, one of the 4 bands that comprise the Ktunaxa Nation near Cranbrook B.C. announced a preliminary finding of 182 unmarked graves on what was believed to be cemetery grounds. [15] On July 12, 2021, 160 “undocumented and unmarked” graves were confirmed to be found Penelakut Island at the former Kuper Island Industrial School. [16]
The discoveries of these graves is not new news to Indigenous Peoples in Canada, but is harmful news nonetheless. The TRC Calls to Action 71-76 call on the Federal Government and other relevant parties (Indigenous Nations and Provincial Vital Statistics agencies) to provide existing information about the burials and deaths of children who attended residential schools but also to “develop and implement strategies and procedures for the ongoing identification, documentation, maintenance, commemoration, and protection of residential school cemeteries or other sites at which residential school children were buried.”[17]
Indigenous Peoples especially those who attended the school have been directly impacted by this news. Some have expressed feelings of being overwhelmed or retraumatized. Others have found a sense of peace in getting closer to having answers and recognition for the horrors faced. Students themselves were the ones who had to dig the graves and bury the children that had died. For those students, this has been a very difficult time. One survivor George Muldoe, in an interview with CTV news, stated that when he was 15, he had the task of digging grave sand burying his fellow students. There was no ceremony or family, just a truck dumping the bodies and then himself and the other students tasked with the burials. He remarked that a body could sit there for 3 days while they were digging until they could bury it. He didn’t always know who he was burying and sometimes, students didn’t even get buried. In the interview, he remarked “I don’t think they’ll ever find everybody… some of the people, especially the fetuses, were put in furnaces,”.[18]
Ultimately, it is important to remember that this is still very much in living memory. Former student’s friends and family members are being rediscovered. For some, it may bring closure, for others, it will cause a great deal of trauma. There is no one right way to grieve or react to news like this. At the end of the day, understanding how trauma affects individuals will better aid you in understanding the lived experiences and intergenerational trauma of Indigenous Peoples.
Timeline of Unmarked Grave (Re)Discoveries – May-June 2021
Canada Day, July 1st 2021 – Copyright Garry Gottfriedson
Canada, you have claimed this July day
to boast the birth of colonial takeover
a perpetual death warrant for my people
and a day in which you have held
your own citizens in scorn
when in fact, they were innocent
of your contempt and cover-ups
tell me how can I celebrate
what arose from within the deep
corners of your mind
to wordsmith the Indian Act and other policies of
decimation
annihilation
degradation
and starvation
you see, I have 215 reasons
to be skeptical of your contributions
the price of their last breathes
at the hands of the church and state
your residential school legacy of
child abduction
sodomy
rape
torture
and murder
to celebrate
your colonial birthday is an acknowledgement
that their lives and mine
was not a high enough price
to appease your ghastly desire
to abuse our bodies at your will
then use our blood as ink
to write your white paper policy
it is betrayal to admit defeat
under those circumstances
because those 215 ancestral bones won’t allow
the river-songs still flowing
in my blood to die so easily
nor will they will permit
the graveyards in my heart to enter rage
instead they whisper
from the orchards
“they have found us”
and I share that joy
and the new found courage
to use my voice to thank
my ancestors and awakened citizens
breaking your shame
running for the dead
riding and driving in solidarity
the kind-heartedness of Sikh and other
strangers shedding tears with us
reminding us of this simple word
tsqelmucwilc
‘I have returned to being human’
and for this, I will celebrate
- Carrado, Cohen, Mental Health Profiles for a Sample of British Columbia’s Aboriginal Survivors of the Canadian Residential School System. ↵
- Ian Mosby, "Hunger was never absent: How Residential school diets shaped current patterns of diabetes among Indigenous peoples in Canada" (2017) 189:32 CMAJ E1043, online (pdf): US National Library of Medicine <www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5555756/pdf/189e1043.pdf> [perma.cc/6TWX-TR66]. ↵
- Yehuda, Intergenerational transmission of trauma effects: putative role of epigenetic mechanisms ↵
- Bombay A, Matheson K, Anisman H. The intergenerational effects of Indian residential schools: implications for the concept of historical trauma. Transcult Psychiatry. 2014;51(3):320–38. ↵
- Chandler, Michael & Travis Proulx. “Changing selves in Changing Worlds: Youth suicide on the fault-lines of Colliding Cultures” (2006) 10:2 Archives of Suicide Research 125. ↵
- “Speaking Notes for Assembly of First Nations National Chief Phil Fontaine International Conference on Ethics” (5 February 2007), online: Nation Talk <nationtalk.ca/story/speaking-notes-for-assembly-of-first-nations-national-chief-phil-fontaine-international-conference-on-ethics> [perma.cc/X34L-B6NU]. ↵
- First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, “Why is this case important?” (25 January 2021 last visited), online: First Nations Child and Family Caring Society <fncaringsociety.com/why-case-important> [perma.cc/3979-M5WV]. ↵
- “I am a Witness – Background” (25 January 2021 last visited), online: First Nations Child and Family Caring Society <fncaringsociety.com/i-am-witness-background> [perma.cc/WQN5-3ULB]. ↵
- First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada et al. v. Attorney General of Canada (for the Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada), 2016 CHRT 2 (CanLII), online: CanLII <canlii.ca/t/gn2vg> [perma.cc/VAN7-ZUM5]. ↵
- In 1965, the federal government entered into an agreement with the Province of Ontario to enable social services, including child and family services, to be extended to First Nations communities on reserve. ↵
- First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada et al. v. Attorney General of Canada (for the Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada), 2016 CHRT 2 at Para 481 ↵
- Dictionary.com "Microaggression" https://www.dictionary.com/browse/microaggression ↵
- Kukpi7 Rosanne Casimir, "Remains of Children of Kamloops Residential School Discovered" Press Release, May 27, 2021. https://tkemlups.ca/remains-of-children-of-kamloops-residential-school-discovered/ ↵
- Bryan Eneas, "Sask. First Nation announces discovery of 751 unmarked graves near former residential school" CBC News, June 24, 2021. Last Updated June 25, 2021. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/cowessess-marieval-indian-residential-school-news-1.6078375 ↵
- Alex Migdal "182 unmarked graves discovered near residential school in B.C.'s Interior, First Nation says" CBC News, June 30, 2021. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-remains-residential-school-interior-1.6085990 ↵
- CTV News "More than 160 unmarked graves found near another B.C. residential school site: Penelakut Tribe" July 12, 2021. https://bc.ctvnews.ca/more-than-160-unmarked-graves-found-near-another-b-c-residential-school-site-penelakut-tribe-1.5506774 ↵
- Truth And Reconcilliation Commission of Canada "Calls to Action" 2015. ↵
- Steven Dyer "'I've been very overwhelmed': Survivors gather at former residential school site" CTV News Edmonton, July 6, 2021. https://edmonton.ctvnews.ca/i-ve-been-very-overwhelmed-survivors-gather-at-former-residential-school-site-1.5499456 ↵