Burial sites found at 53 Native American boarding schools, U.S.
government says
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[May 12, 2022] By
Brad Brooks
(Reuters) -A U.S. government investigation
into the dark history of Native American boarding schools has found
"marked or unmarked burial sites" at 53 of them, Interior Secretary Deb
Haaland said on Wednesday.
Haaland, the first Native American cabinet member, announced the
investigation last year. In releasing preliminary findings during a
press conference in Washington, she spoke through tears and in a
choked-up voice.
"The federal policies that attempted to wipe out Native identity,
language and culture continue to manifest in the pain tribal communities
face today," Haaland said. "We must shed light on the unspoken traumas
of the past."
Until Wednesday, the U.S. government had yet to provide any true
accounting of the legacy of the schools, which used education to change
culture so tribal land could be taken. Families were forced to send
their children to the schools.
To compile Haaland's report, researchers located records on 408 schools
that received federal funding from 1819 to 1969, and another 89 schools
that did not receive money from the government. About half the schools
were run for the government by or supported by churches of various
denominations. Many children were abused at the schools, and tens of
thousands were never heard from again, activists and researchers say.
The report noted that "rampant physical, sexual, and emotional abuse"
took place at the schools and is well documented, and that so far the
investigation had found over 500 children who died while in school
custody. Investigators said they expect to uncover many more deaths.
Haaland said she's beginning a year-long "road to healing" tour to
listen to survivors of the boarding school system. The next goals of the
investigation are to estimate the number of kids who attended the
schools, finding more burial sites and identifying how much federal
monies went to churches that took part in the school system, among other
issues.
She said Congress had provided $7 million to keep the research going
this year, which she said was fundamental to helping Native Americans
heal.
Experts said the first report on the investigation had barely scratched
the surface of what needs to be examined. The Interior Department has
identified more than 98 million pages of documents that may relate to
the boarding school system within the American Indian Records Repository
that still need to be evaluated. Tens of millions more pages housed
regional branches of the National Archives and Records Administration
also must be examined.
A former congresswoman from New Mexico, Haaland in 2020 introduced
legislation calling for a Truth and Healing Commission into conditions
at former Native American boarding schools. That legislation is still
pending, and hearings on the most recent version of the bill are
scheduled for Thursday before a U.S. House of Representatives
Subcommittee for Indigenous Peoples of the United States.
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Clarence Smith, who attended both Chemawa Indian School in Oregon
and the Flandreau Indian School in South Dakota, poses for a
portrait at his home in Thornton, Colorado, U.S., June 18, 2021.
REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt/File Photo
Deborah Parker, head of the National Native American
Boarding School Healing Coalition that's assisting the Interior
Department in its investigation, said the report just scratched the
surface of the trauma.
"Our children had names. Our children had families.
Our children have their own languages," she said at the press
conference. "Our children had their own regalia, prayers and
religion before Indian boarding schools violently took them away."
'IDENTITY ALTERATION'
Researchers examined government records and spoke to Native
Americans to prepare the report. The results detail a history dating
to at least 1801, when the first such schools opened, and one in
which education was used as a weapon.
Native American affairs, including education, were a War Department
responsibility until 1849 and the military remained involved even
after civilians took over, the report noted.
The schools were described as resembling military academies in their
regimentation and strictness and emphasizing vocational skills.
Police were called on to force families to send their children to
the schools. Food was denied to families as another way to force
them to surrender their children.
"These conditions included militarized and identity alteration
methodologies - on kids!" said Bryan Newland, the assistant
secretary for Indian Affairs at the Interior Department, who heads
the investigation.
Conditions at former Indian boarding schools gained global attention
last year when tribal leaders in Canada announced the discovery of
the unmarked graves of 215 children at the site of the former
Kamloops residential school for indigenous children, as such
institutions are known in Canada.
Unlike the United States, Canada carried out a full investigation
into its schools via a Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
The U.S. government has never acknowledged how many children
attended such schools, how many children died or went missing from
them or even how many schools existed.
The report released on Wednesday included recommendations for
funding programs to preserve the Native American languages the
schools tried to stamp out, and establishing a federal memorial.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas; editing by Donna
Bryson, Aurora Ellis and Grant McCool)
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