‘It’s a very important chapter in our history that needs to be addressed. You just can’t sweep it under the rug and forget about it’
[Photo: The remains of more than a dozen Indigenous students who died at the former St. Boniface Indian Industrial School in Banning, which operated from 1890 until 1952, remain buried at the former school’s cemetery on Gilman Street, west of 8th Street. (Photos by Joe Nelson)]
Among the crumbling ruins of the former St. Boniface Indian Industrial School in Banning is a fenced enclosure where broken, weathered and worn grave markers lie. A white, wooden cross looms over the cemetery, where the remains of more than a dozen Indigenous children remain buried and forgotten.
Nestled against a hillside, it is a somber reminder of the atrocities that once occurred there.
“Those of us who grew up on Indian reservations, we heard about St. Boniface. My…
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