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Mon Jul 26, 2021, 04:36 PM

The U.S. and Canada share a troubling history with residential schools

A member of the U.S. federal cabinet says she wept when she heard news from Canada about what are believed to be unmarked burial sites of children's remains near a former residential school.

The news made Deb Haaland think of her own Pueblo ancestors such as her grandmother, who as a girl was taken from her family, put on a train and placed in the American version of a residential school for five years.

snip

An architect of Canada's residential schools policy, in an 1879 paper, looked at boarding schools just established in the U.S. and urged Canada to create similar ones.

On the basis of that paper from Nicholas Davin, Canada's federal government opened three such schools, starting in 1883 in the future province of Saskatchewan.

Both countries borrowed ideas from reformatories being constructed in Europe for children of the urban poor, said the Truth and Reconciliation report.

more

https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/united-states-canada-residential-schools-1.6114085


I did not know much of what is in this article. I thought the atrocious idea of residential schools was solely a Canadian creation until reading this.

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Reply The U.S. and Canada share a troubling history with residential schools (Original post)
Spazito Jul 2021 OP
brush Jul 2021 #1
True Dough Jul 2021 #2
Spazito Jul 2021 #3


Response to Spazito (Original post)

Mon Jul 26, 2021, 05:19 PM

2. The young man pictured

was most definitely not named "Tom Torlino" upon entering the institution. That was a recreation of his identity by the ethnocentric government, as was his image "makeover."

It was all about assimilation.

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Response to True Dough (Reply #2)

Mon Jul 26, 2021, 05:33 PM

3. Yes, the forced removal of their beliefs, culture, their very names....

were done to "Kill the Indian (in him)...and save the man". Everything was taken from them, everything.

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