close
Monday, July 25, 2022

Pope in week-long visit to Canada; apologises to residential school survivors

Some 150,000 Indigenous children were taken from their families and forced to attend Catholic run schools in the 19th century through 1970s.

• July 25, 2022
Pope Francis (Credit: AP New)
Pope Francis (Credit: AP New)

Pope Francis on Sunday arrived in Canada to apologise to residential school survivors on their lands for the Catholic Church’s operation of residential schools throughout the country.

The Pope will make three stops in the course of his five-day tour of Edmonton, Alberta, the province that hosts the most residential schools in Canada.

The Pontiff will also stopover in Quebec City, Montreal, for “an eastern hub”; and Iqaluit, Nunavut in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, home to the largest congregation of Inuit people in Canada.

According to reports, Mr Francis kissed the hand of a residential school survivor as he was greeted at the Edmonton, Alberta, airport by Indigenous representatives, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mary Simon, an Inuk who is Canada’s first Indigenous governor general.

The gesture set the tone of what Mr Francis has said is a “penitential pilgrimage” to atone for the role of Catholic missionaries in the forced assimilation of generations of native children.

Mr Francis had no official events scheduled Sunday, giving him time to rest before his meeting Monday with survivors near the site of a former residential school in Maskwacis, where he is expected to pray at a cemetery and apologise.

Mr Francis exited the back of his plane with the help of an ambulift, given his strained knee ligaments have forced him to use a wheelchair.

The simple welcome ceremony took place in the airport hangar, where Indigenous drums and chanting broke the silence. As Mr Trudeau and Ms Simon sat beside MrFrancis, a succession of Indigenous leaders and elders greeted the pope and exchanged gifts.

At one point, Mr Francis kissed the hand of residential school survivor Elder Alma Desjarlais of the Frog Lake First Nations as she was introduced to him.

“Right now, many of our people are skeptical and they are hurt,” said Grand Chief George Arcand Jr. of the Confederacy of Treaty Six First Nations, who greeted the Pope.

“Yet he expressed hope that with the papal apology, “We could begin our journey of healing .. and change the way things have been for our people for many, many years.”

Indigenous groups are seeking more than just words, though, as they press for access to church archives to learn the fate of children who never returned home from the residential schools.

They also want justice for the abusers, financial reparations and the return of Indigenous artifacts held by the Vatican Museums.

Mr Francis’ week-long trip — which will take him to Edmonton; Quebec City and finally Iqaluit, Nunavut, in the far north — follows meetings he held in the spring at the Vatican with delegations from the First Nations, Metis and Inuit.

Those meetings culminated with a historic April 1 apology for the “deplorable” abuses committed by some Catholic missionaries in residential schools.

The Canadian government has admitted that physical and sexual abuse were rampant in the state-funded Christian schools that operated from the 19th century to the 1970s.

Some 150,000 Indigenous children were taken from their families and forced to attend in an effort to isolate them from the influence of their homes, native languages and cultures and assimilate them into Canada’s Christian society.

Then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued a formal apology over the residential schools in 2008.

As part of a lawsuit settlement involving the government, churches and approximately 90,000 surviving students, Canada paid reparations that amounted to billions of dollars being transferred to Indigenous communities.

Canada’s Catholic Church says its dioceses and religious orders have provided more than 50 million dollars in cash and in-kind contributions, and hope to add 30 million dollars more over the next five years. 

(NAN)

We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.

More from Peoples Gazette

bread

States

Cross River bakers to increase prices of bread, reduce production

Bakers in the state had made several complaints following the high cost of condiments for bread and other confectionery production.

Sebastian Coe

Sport

World Athletics to introduce repechage round at Paris 2024 Olympic

In this new repechage format, athletes who do not qualify by place in round one heats will have a second chance to qualify for the semi-finals.

Godwin Izilien

Sport

Super Falcons risk poor showing at World Cup if lapses are not corrected, says ex-coach

Izilein, who spoke with journalists in Calabar on Monday, described the Super Falcons’ outing in Morocco as “disastrous.”

fertiliser

Agriculture

Soaring fertiliser prices force Kano farmers into sorghum farming

Checks indicated that a bag of fertiliser costs about N25,000, depending on the type and brand of the commodity.

Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing

World

Myanmar junta executes four democracy activists on terrorism charges

Myanmar’s military junta has executed four dissidents found guilty of terrorism charges in January, in its first use of the death sentence since 1990.

Executive Secretary of Nigerian Christian Pilgrim Commission, Rev. Yakubu Pam

Faith

NCPC boss urges Christian pilgrims to pray for peace in Nigeria

Mr Pam spoke in Nazareth, Israel, during the 2021 ongoing main pilgrimage to Israel and Jordan.