The Kamloops Cemetery
Commentary, Aboriginal Futures, Brian Giesbrecht June 6, 2021
The discovery of human
remains at the site of a former residential school has set off a firestorm that
has already resulted in demands for another national inquiry, and massively
expensive forensic and excavation projects. But maybe we should take a pause,
and ask some questions.
The Kamloops Indian
Residential School operated as a residential school from 1890 to 1969. Its peak
enrollment was around 500 in the 1950s. Although there has understandably been
an outpouring of sympathy, it is not clear at this point how many of the bodies
detected were residential students. It’s also not clear that there was even
anything sinister about the discovery.
In fact, it is
shocking that many people seem quite willing to accept slanderous conspiracy
theories about teachers and priests murdering, and secretly burying, hundreds
of children. There are many forgotten cemeteries in Canada. It is far more
likely that the deaths simply reflected the sad reality of life back then. We
should take a look at the history.
Tuberculosis was a
major killer, and it didn’t spare children. From 1890 until the 1950s it was
responsible for many child deaths. Influenza was also a particularly deadly
disease for indigenous people. The 1918 Spanish flu killed a disproportionate
number of indigenous people, but even ordinary influenza was particularly
deadly for them. Other diseases that have all but disappeared now, like
Whooping Cough, Meningitis and Measles, routinely took yesterday’s children.
Disease took many from
every demographic, but indigenous people suffered most. They died mainly in
their home communities, where the Grim Reaper was always close by. Infected
children entered residential schools, and infected others. Many died.
In our comfortable
times we forget how hard life was a hundred and more years ago – Dickens’ world
of chimney sweeps, and the Poor House. Stories are now being written about
Canada’s “Home Children”, for example. These were mainly English orphans, and
children from poor homes, who were taken from their parents and sent by
themselves to Canada. Little children – some as young as seven – would arrive
with cardboard signs around their necks advertising their free labour.
Boys would be taken by
farmers and used as labour, in return for their keep. The girls would be used
as domestic workers. Some received good treatment – some were treated very
badly. Many died alone and forgotten. It is a coincidence that the number of
“Home Children” roughly equaled the total number of children who attended
residential schools – 150,000.
The Home Children are
one example only of the sadness that was part of the lives of all poor children
who had the misfortune to be born in those times. Indigenous children suffered
more than most. This historical snippet in no way mitigates the importance of
the Kamloops discovery. But we should consider the harshness of previous times,
before letting emotion overtake good sense.
The dead should be
appropriately honoured, but we should be mindful that some opportunists will
exploit these dead children for financial and political gain. The residential
school story has now been exhaustively told. Canadians have heard it – and we
get it. We have sympathized, and billions of dollars have been paid by people,
most of whom weren’t alive then, to people who mostly weren’t either.
Brian Giesbrecht, retired judge, is a senior fellow at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
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