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Pope in Canada: Why his apology for school abuse will be significant

by Editorial Team
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AFP

Indigenous Canadians have been waiting and hoping for years for an apology for the pope’s abuses at state schools run by churches in the last century, where some 150,000 Indigenous children were forcibly enrolled.
 
In an AFP interview, Marie-Pierre Bousquet, director of Indigenous studies at the University of Montreal, explains why Pope Francis’ visit is a key moment for the entire country, as it seeks to come to terms with this dark chapter in its history.
 
The pope has already apologised.

Why the visit?
 
For Indigenous people and all Canadians, the apology must be pronounced here, on Canadian soil. This will be more powerful and of an impact, notably because, in indigenous cultures, the land of their ancestors is of particular importance.
 
And then, many survivors must attend. It’s a very old request, they’ve been waiting for years.
 
But generations will experience this differently. We feel that young Indigenous people are interested but they don’t seem to know what to expect. For the oldest, they hope but there has been so much disappointment, and false promises already.
 
What do survivors hope for?
 
For some, the expectations are immense, they hope for great changes afterward, progress in terms of reconciliation, funding to get out of their often very difficult conditions…
 
And even those who believe that it’s too little, too late are still very attentive to what is happening.
 
But in the end, it should be mainly symbolic, and emotional. And that’s already important because a lot of things need to come out. These are emotions that have not been expressed for years. Indigenous people need to speak up and be heard.
 
Even if what comes out is negative, all Canadians must hear the anger, the sadness… It has to be visible.
 
This visit is not a celebration. It will be a time of commemoration and respect, residential school survivors need to be at the heart of the process for it to have any meaning.
 
What about broader Canadian society?
 
Society has evolved profoundly in recent months and years on these issues. The country is facing its history. Today, Canadians realise that the past that allowed Canada to be the great country it is today is not what they thought.
 
On the Indigenous side, there is a very strong desire for de-colonisation, so Canadian society today faces the consequences of the system of assimilation put in place for decades. It will be a huge disappointment if this realisation does not happen.

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