July - 2009
Reconciliation comes after understanding
and acknowledgement
By Shari Narine
Windspeaker Writer
EDMONTON
The peal of church bells ringing throughout the country on
June 11 marked more than the National Day of Reconciliation and
a year since Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized for Canada's
part in residential schools.
It was also the recognition of an improving relationship between
Christian churches and First Nations people.
With the Pope's statement of sorrow in April, the Catholic church
is the final institution to acknowledge its role in the harm
perpetrated on residential school students in Canada, but as
many Aboriginal people said after the statement of Pope Benedict
XVI, 'those are just words.' They don't mean that parishioners
fully understand or appreciate that it takes more than words
to reconcile them with Aboriginal peoples across the country.
"The history we share of exclusion, of great racism on the
Prairies, still exists," said Archbishop James Weisgerber,
president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. Weisgerber
was instrumental in bringing about a private audience between
representatives from the Assembly of First Nations and the pontiff.
Weisgerber grew up in Saskatchewan. He, like many others of European
descent, saw those who worked in residential schools as heroes,
dedicating their lives to bringing Christianity to a lost people.
"We didn't see the down side of what was being done,"
he admitted.
Not only were Natives systemically stripped of their culture,
their language and their religion, but many children were physically
and sexually abused.
Many who died in residential schools were buried in unmarked
graves. According to government records, more than 150,000 children
attended 120 residential schools over a period of 120 years.
More than half of those children died while at school or shortly
after returning home.
Work towards reconciliation has begun with the apologies, issued
not only by the churches but by Prime Minister Harper on behalf
of the Canadian government. There has been financial compensation.
And soon there will be work undertaken by the newly re-appointed
Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
But reconciliation needs to go beyond the leaders and into the
church pews.
Rick Chapman is an ordained Anglican minister and a member of
the Inner City Pastoral Ministry, which works in Edmonton's downtown,
ministering to the underprivileged. Along with regular services
held at the Bissell Centre, which provides for some of the city's
poorest, Chapman connects with his charges on the streets.
The average churchgoer, said Chapman, does not understand that
healing goes beyond the settlement cheques many residential school
survivors have received.
"People in the pews are saying, 'How come we had to pay
all that money? And now that we've paid all that money, we're
done right?'" said Chapman.
It's been 16 years since the Anglican church led the way by issuing
a formal apology for the treatment of Aboriginal people in that
church's residential schools. The Presbyterian church followed
in 1994 and the United church in 1998. The Canadian government
didn't issue its apology until June 2008.
"There's a big gap in knowing the experience of Aboriginal
people within the non-Aboriginal culture and within Canada as
a whole. Canadians don't understand the experience of the Aboriginal
people," said Chapman.
Dialogue will lead to understanding, but acknow-ledging the value
of the culture and traditions is doubly important. That was no
more obvious than when Anishinaabe Elder Tobasonakwut Kinew was
able to display his traditional spiritual symbols during the
private audience with the Pope on April 29.
"(Elder Kinew) had them all spread out and he asked the
Holy Father to bless them and the Holy Father did that. It was
a question of reaching out," said Weisgerber. When the Catholic
church started its relationship with the Aboriginal people 200
years ago in Canada, church officials didn't take the time to
understand the significance of that culture's symbols, said Weisgerber.
"(Church officials) are doing that now and we're more open
to that now."
Chapman has served in the far north of Canada where he's been
immersed in the Aboriginal way of life.
"I believe Native traditions and spirituality have a lot
to speak to in terms of Christian values," he said. And
the church plays a role in promoting that understanding.
"This is about our society, not just the church. But the
church is a major player within our society and we have a great,
great role here," said Weisgerber.
Weisgerber points to the "Returning to Spirit" program
established by Aboriginal psychologist Marc Pizandawatc, an Algonquin
from Kitiganzibi First Nation, and Ann Thompson, a sister of
St. Anne, from British Columbia.
Through that program, small groups of Aboriginal people and church
people gather separately to learn about trust, letting go of
issues and moving forward.
"They come together for a third time, all of them. It's
an amazing understanding of reconciliation," said Weisgerber.
Chapman noted that the Anglican church is embracing the role
of change in a number of ways, including in Kenora North, Ont.,
where the large Aboriginal population has led to the training
of Aboriginal people as clergy. There has been a shift in roles
in the church, said Chapman.
"(The church is) in the position where we can help people
deal with (racism)," agreed Weisgerber.
Assembly of First Nations (AFN) National Chief Phil Fontaine
is in agreement with that assessment. Following the April audience
with the Pope, Fontaine said the "terrible lack of knowledge
and understanding of Indigenous people in Canada" has led
the AFN to work with the churches to get the message out.
"One of the things we have to do is educate and inform Canadians.
We need the support of fair-minded people. They will only support
us if they know us," said Fontaine.
The AFN is working informally with the churches to do outreach
with local First Nations, as well as with AFN offices and regional
chiefs to discuss activities that will promote understanding
and reconciliation at the grassroots level.
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