Truth and Reconciliation report: nothing short of “cultural genocide”

CANADA
CHEK

A long-awaited report on the horrors of Canada’s residential school system calls it nothing short of a “cultural genocide,” making 94 broad recommendations _ everything from greater police independence and reducing the number of aboriginal children in foster care to restrictions on the use of conditional and mandatory minimum sentences.

The summary of the Truth and Reconciliation report, out today, is the culmination of six emotional years of extensive study into the church-run, government-funded institutions, which operated for more than 120 years.

Justice Murray Sinclair, Canada’s first aboriginal justice and the commission’s chairman, was welcomed to the podium at a packed news conference in Ottawa with a sustained and heartfelt standing ovation.

“The residential school experience is clearly one of the darkest most troubling chapters in our collective history,” said Sinclair, who called the commission “a difficult, inspiring and very painful journey for all of us.”

“In the period from Confederation until the decision to close residential schools was taken in this country in 1969, Canada clearly participated in a period of cultural genocide.”

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