Genocide of the Indigenous Peoples in Canada (PDF, new window)
They took away our clothes, and gave us clothes... we all looked alike. Our hair was all the same, cut us into bangs, and straight short, straight hair up to our ears... They took away our moccasins, and gave us shoes. I was just a baby. I didn’t actually wear shoes, we wore moccasins. And so our identity was immediately taken away when we entered those schools.
We were incarcerated for no other reason than being Indian. We were deprived of the care, love, and guidance of our parents during our most critical years of childhood. The time we could have learned the critical parenting skills and values was lost to the generations that attended residential schools, the effects of which still haunt us and will continue to have impacts upon our people and communities.
Image. A group of nuns with Indigenous students, Port Harrison, Québec, 1890. Credit: H. J. Woodside,Library and Archives Canada, PA-123707
©Kent Monkman: The Scoop, 2018.
Image. Mrs. Haggerty at Yellowknife Indian Residential School in the Northwest Territories with three Inuit children on their way to school, 1970. Credit: Library and Archives Canada, PA-136743