When Pope visits Canada, indigenous people look for healing – and action
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[July 20, 2022]
By Anna Mehler Paperny
TORONTO (Reuters) - When Pope Francis
travels to Canada, indigenous leaders and residential school survivors
say, they are hoping for more than an apology: They want action.
Francis, who will be the first pope in nearly 20 years to visit Canada,
said on Sunday he was making a "pilgrimage of penance" to help heal the
wrongs done to indigenous people by Roman Catholic priests and nuns who
ran abusive residential schools linked to deaths of thousands of
children.
More than 150,000 children were taken from their homes and many were
subjected to abuse, rape and malnutrition in what Canada's Truth and
Reconciliation Commission in 2015 called "cultural genocide."
The discovery of the remains of 215 children at a former residential
school in British Columbia last year brought the issue to the fore again
amid calls for a formal apology from the Pope. Since then, the suspected
remains of hundreds more children have been detected at other former
residential schools around the country.
Francis, 85, is personally popular in Canada, particularly among
Catholics, who represent 32% of the population, according to the last
census. Tickets for his free events were snapped up within minutes and
Indigenous groups said they have been overwhelmed with queries from
residential school survivors interested in attending.
In the northern territory of Nunavut, nearly 200 residents applied for
travel assistance to see the Pope during his stop in the capital,
Iqaluit, said David Aglukark, a project manager with Nunavut Tunngavik
Inc., an Inuit organization that is arranging travel.
"There's quite a bit of interest because of the trauma," Aglukark said.
"What we have heard is, this (visit) is going to help them in the
healing process. They sound relieved. They sound happy."
During his July 24-30 trip, Francis will first visit Edmonton and
Maskwacis in the western province of Alberta, then Lac Ste. Anne in
Quebec before ending in Iqaluit, in Canada’s Nunavut territory. He is
scheduled to deliver nine homilies and addresses and say two masses.
The last papal visit to Canada was by Pope John Paul II in 2002.
'WHAT'S AN APOLOGY?'
The pontiff issued an historic apology in April after a week of meetings
with delegates from indigenous nations in Rome and, while his visit will
be "part of the healing journey" for some survivors, words alone will
not be enough, said Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations Chief
Bobby Cameron.
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Pope Francis waves as he leads the Angelus prayer from his window,
at the Vatican July 17, 2022. Vatican Media/Handout via REUTERS
"There are those that are saying, 'What's an apology?
We don't need an apology. We need action,’" Cameron said.
Survivors and leaders of indigenous communities say they want
financial compensation, artifact recovery, support in bringing
alleged abusers to justice and the release of records relating to
the schools, which operated between 1831 and 1996.
Some indigenous leaders also want the Catholic Church to renounce a
15th-century colonial doctrine that justified dispossessing
indigenous people, issued as papal bulls or edicts.
"Rescinding the papal bulls ... opening up the archives for
survivors to find their family and to piece together what happened
in the schools," said indigenous lawyer Eleanore Sunchild, who was
among the delegates in Rome this spring.
"There's so much healing to do from what the church left in our
communities. To actually heal the survivors ... that is a
compensation package we have never had."
This spring, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops promised to
raise C$30 million for healing, culture and language revitalization
and other initiatives. The Indigenous Reconciliation Fund is a
registered charity accepting contributions from dioceses, said Neil
MacCarthy, a spokesman for the Canadian Conference of Catholic
Bishops. It has raised C$4.6 million so far.
"Others feel more needs to be done and certainly, as a church, we
recognize the papal visit is (only) one significant moment in the
truth and reconciliation journey."
(Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny in Toronto, Rod Nickel in
Winnipeg; Additional reporting Kevin Dougherty in Quebec City;
Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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