Many of the children who died were buried at 65 former schools
across the country in at least 74 marked and unmarked burial
sites, according to a U.S. Department of the Interior study
released on Tuesday.
It was the second and final report on the schools commissioned
by U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, the United
States' first Native American cabinet secretary.
Haaland, a member of New Mexico's Pueblo of Laguna tribe, talks
of the horrors her grandmother and other relatives suffered as
they were forced onto trains to attend the schools. The report
recommends ways the United States can amend for the alleged
physical and sexual abuse generations of children suffered as
they were stripped of their names and prohibited from speaking
their languages.
"Federal policies were set out to break us, obtain our
territories, and destroy our cultures and our lifeways,"
Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs Bryan
Newland, of the Bay Mills Indian Community (Ojibwe), wrote in a
preface to the study.
The department was able to identify 18,624 Indian children who
entered the Federal Indian Boarding School system between 1819
and 1969, though it acknowledged many more attended.
At least 59 religious groups received U.S. government funding to
run the boarding schools, with 210 of the 417 schools operated
by religious institutions, the study found.
The United States spent more than $23.3 billion, in 2023
inflation-adjusted terms, between 1871 and 1969 to run the
schools and associated assimilation policies, the report said.
It recommended a similar amount be invested in remedies for
intergenerational trauma caused by the schools, which ranges
from substance abuse to the crisis of missing and murdered
indigenous women and relatives.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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