Survivors call on Canada to criminalize residential school denialism | CBC News
Residential school survivors are calling on Canada to criminalize residential school denialism, days after the release of a report about unmarked graves and burial sites associated with the institutions.
Doug George, a survivor of the Mohawk Institute, says Canadians need to acknowledge the schools’ place in history and to ensure the children who died are not silenced.
More than 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend residential schools, the last of which closed in 1996.
An estimated 6,000 children died in the schools, though experts say the actual number could be much higher.
Kimberly Murray, special interlocutor on unmarked graves and missing children associated with the schools, says despite the “well-documented reality” of those deaths, some Canadians have made a concerted effort to attack the truths of survivors, Indigenous families and communities.
Murray’s final report released this week says Canada must must provide full reparations to families of those missing children.
NDP MP Leah Gazan introduced a private member’s bill last month that seeks to criminalize residential school denialism, but the Liberal government has not said whether it will support the legislation.