“Alcatraz of Canada”: the dark history of the school for indigenous children in which 160 other unidentified graves were found
To get to or leave the Industrial School, a boat was needed.
The boarding school, run for eight decades by the Church c atólica with government funding, was on Kuper Island and the nearest town was Chemainus, 7 km on another archipelago island west of Vancouver, Canada.
Two sisters drowned while trying to escape from school in 1959. But there were so many student deaths there that no one knows for sure if there were more attempts with the same result.
The boarding school was opened in 1847 and throughout almost a century of operation dozens of children died, many of them being buried in graves that never bore their names or had a mark .
The past 13 of July, the Penelakut tribe announced the discovery – in a preliminary way, as the exact number has yet to be determined – of at least 160 burials, which add up to more than 1. 100 what were found in other boarding schools for indigenous children across Canada.
A scandal that has hit the government of Canada and the Vatican for years and that in recent months has been described as an “indigenous genocide.”
Today the Kuper Island Industrial School no longer exists. It was demolished in 1980 .
But what happened on that island shows the assimilation, violence, abuse sexual and deaths without registration of the that thousands of indigenous children were taken from their homes from a very young age.
“The damage caused by the Indigenous Residential School system, individual and systemic violence, persists a lot in the present. The trauma is intergenerational and the indigenous landscapes of this country are populated by the burials of missing children, ”anthropologist Eric Simons, who has worked with the Penelakut tribe in the detection of graves, tells BBC Mundo.
The “Alcatraz of Canada”
A the Industrial School of Kuper Island has called it the “Alcatraz of Canada”, because, as in the famous prison in California, it was practically impossible to escape from there.
The sisters Patricia Marilyn and Beverly Joseph (from 14 Y 12 years respectively) tried in 1959 and drowned , according to n the documentation of the National Center for Truth and Reconciliation, which has 120 names of children killed in that school.
However, it is not known Actually, if more children from the boarding school tried to flee.
It was not something simple: the waters of the place are frozen most of the year and it is in the middle of a depopulated archipelago and with a wide wild fauna, both on land as in water.
In addition to the main building, where the bedrooms and classrooms were, there was a chapel, an auditorium, some fields for sports and other small buildings for daily tasks.
Like one of 130 residential schools that operated between 1847 Y 1996, its mission was the “integration” of indigenous children to the white culture prevailing since the seventeenth century in Canada.
To the island Kuper arrived thousands of children from the province of British Columbia over the course of eight decades.
“I was admitted there in 1930 ”, says Bill Seward, a former student at the Industrial School, in the documentary “Returning to the Healing Circle” performed by Peter Campbell and Christine Welsh at 1997, sponsored by the Canadian Ministry of Indigenous Affairs.
“The only language I knew was my native language. But when he spoke it, he was punished, a lot. There were many nights that I went to bed without dinner, hungry. Many times I was kneeling in a corner, praying and they watching me do it, or if not, there were more punishments “, recalls the old man.
” They threatened my parents that if they did not take me to that school would be jailed. An Indian agent and a policeman came after me, so I had to go. ”