May - 2006
High-level pressure put on new prime minister
M. Morning Star Doherty, Raven's Eye Writer, Vancouver
As Christ Church Cathedral in Vancouver began to fill on Good
Friday, April 14, parish staff offered parishioners copies of
a letter written by Andrew Hutchison, archbishop and primate
of Canada's Anglican Church urging Prime Minister Stephen Harper
to finally settle the compensation issue surrounding Indian residential
schools. He asked Harper to honor the promise of advanced payments
to the elderly and sick, once students who attended the schools,
and to move forward on other payments without delay.
As the parishioners read the letter, a vigil was being held outside
the church to remember those who went through Canada's residential
school system. Those gathered heard recollections of survivors,
and stories from others affected by the legacy of that system.
"The tears tattooed upon my face are in honor of our people
and our suffering," said Dawna Ambers of the Mumtagila Nation
in British Columbia. "They are a reminder to others of what
the residential school system has put us through. When the children
of our reserve were taken away to St Michael's Residential School
in Alert Bay, the parents followed. They deserted Mumtagila reserve
and our traditional way of life. It has remained abandoned to
this day. The whole community was and still is affected by the
practices of the day, whether or not we attended residential
school ourselves or were brought up by parents who did."
Randy Murray is Christ Church Cathedral's communications and
development associate. He said the Anglican church believes the
elderly should get their compensation now.
"Each church within Canada's Anglican Church was billed
a share of the $25-million settlement that we owed to survivors
of the residential school system. Christ Church Cathedral Vancouver's
share was $90,000 and our parishioners raised the money in cash
and pledges, as have all the parishioners of all other Anglican
Churches in the greater Vancouver area. No one pretends it's
enough compensation; however delaying payments to the elderly
serves no good purpose," he said. "We are disappointed
by the lack of humanity the new federal government is showing
to the promises that were made to elderly survivors, promises
which have been broken once again."'
Christopher Livingstone of the Western Aboriginal Harm Reduction
Society (WAHRS) and member of the Nisga'a Nation in Northern
B.C., believes the issues of Canada's residential school system
must be kept in the public domain.
"Vancouver's Downtown Eastside (DTES) is a war zone. HIV/AIDS,
Hepatitis C, poverty and unemployment, this all comes from the
residential school system," Livingstone said.
"We are here today because we care. Lots of people are aware
of what happened to us and many are not. In a four block radius
in DTES, thousands of Aboriginal people have no job, no future,
no hope. We need treatment facilities so the next generation
has opportunities, jobs, a future and hope."
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