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Indian Residential Schools

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Title: Indian Residential Schools


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Indian Residential Schools
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  • First Nations people wanted to educate their
    children to ensure that their cultures survived
    in a changing world
  • The federal government wanted to assimilate First
    Nations peoples. A rich First Nations culture
    was seen as an obstacle to building the Canadian
    nation.

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  • All aspects of First Nations Culture was
    eliminated from the schools
  • Children were forbidden to speak their native
    language and were punished for doing so.

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Children were required to wear school uniforms.
Hairstyles were cut short in European style. The
children ate primarily Euro-Canadian foods.
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  • Boys were separated from girls. Siblings were
    intentionally separated in order to weaken family
    ties.

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  • Students celebrated Christian holidays and
    learned to play European sports such as soccer
    and cricket.

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  • The school day was divided between religious
    instruction and training for manual labour. They
    were taught practical skills such as sewing,
    woodworking, reading and writing. They didnt get
    academic subjects such as history, geography,
    math, and science.

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  • When an Indian comes out of these places it is
    like being put between two walls in a room and
    left hanging in the middle. On one side are all
    the things he learned from his people and their
    way of life that was being wiped out, and on the
    other are the white mans way which he could
    never fully understand since he never had the
    right amount of education and could not be part
    of it. There he is, hanging in the middle of the
    two cultures and he is not a white man and he is
    not an Indian. They washed away practically
    everything an Indian needed to help himself, to
    think the way a human person should in order to
    survive.
  • -John Tootoosis, senator, political activist, and
    former student in a residential school

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Cultural genocide
  • Little or no contact with families
  • When they returned home their family
    relationships were distant.
  • Not much in common with families.
  • Didnt speak language so couldnt communicate
  • Didnt have same beliefs
  • Didnt practice same traditions and customs
  • Children were caught between two cultures.

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Timeline
  • 1857 - Gradual Civilization Act passed to
    assimilate Indians.1870-1910 - Period of
    assimilation where the clear objective of both
    missionaries and government was to assimilate
    Aboriginal children into the lower fringes
    (non-educated) of mainstream society1920 -
    Compulsory attendance for all children ages 7-15
    years. Children were forcibly taken from their
    families by priests, Indian agents and police
    officers. 1931 - There were 80 residential
    schools operating in Canada.1948 There were
    72 residential schools with 9,368 students.
    1979 There were 12 residential schools
    with1,899 students.1980s - Residential School
    students began disclosing sexual and other forms
    of abuse at residential schools. 1996 - The
    last federally run residential school, the Gordon
    Residential School, closes in Saskatchewan.

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CBC Archives
  • http//archives.cbc.ca/society/native_issues/topic
    s/692/
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