World

Pope apologises to Canada’s indigenous for abuse at church-run schools

Catholic leader admits to ‘pain and shame’, asks survivors for forgiveness

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 02 Apr 2022 2:00PM

Pope apologises to Canada’s indigenous for abuse at church-run schools
Pope Francis says that he hopes to travel to Canada for the country’s St Anne’s Feast Day on July 26. – AFP pic, April 2, 2022

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis apologised yesterday to indigenous people for abuse committed at church-run residential schools in Canada, and said he hoped to visit the country in July.

“I ask for God’s forgiveness for the deplorable conduct of these members of the Catholic Church,” he said, telling indigenous delegations at the Vatican it caused him “pain and shame”.

Numerous investigations into the former residential schools are underway across Canada after the discovery of mass unmarked graves, with more than 4,000 children believed to be missing, according to authorities.

Francis said he heard “stories of suffering, deprivation, discriminatory treatment, and various forms of abuse” during meetings this week with survivors from the First Nations, Metis, and Inuit groups.

“I join the Canadian bishops in asking you for forgiveness,” he said.

The 85-year old pontiff added that he hopes to travel to Canada for the country’s St Anne’s Feast Day on July 26.

The president of the Metis National Council, Cassidy Caron, told journalists after the meeting that the pope’s words were appreciated.

“His apology is absolutely historic and so meaningful to so many people. This opens the doors for us to continue on our healing journey and continue to fight for action,” she said, adding that survivors “deserve justice”.

“I now look forward to his coming to Canada where he can deliver this heartfelt apology directly to our survivors and their families,” she said.

Gerald Antoine, regional chief of First Nations, said yesterday was “the day we had been waiting for”.

“We accept this apology as a gesture of good faith,” he said.

Francis heard first-hand this week of centuries of abuse committed at the schools, and the delegations had pressed him for an apology for a scandal that rocked the Catholic Church.

Some 150,000 First Nations, Metis, and Inuit children were enrolled from the late 1800s to the 1990s in 139 residential schools across Canada, as part of a government policy of forced assimilation.

They spent months or years isolated from their families, language and culture, and many were physically and sexually abused by headmasters and teachers.

Pope Francis on Friday slammed the “ideological colonisation” of which “so many children have been victims”.

“Your identity and culture have been wounded, many families have been separated,” he said.

He described as “chilling” the “unresolved traumas that have become intergenerational traumas”.

Thousands are believed to have died of disease, malnutrition, or neglect. More than 1,300 unmarked graves have been discovered since May 2021 at the schools.

A truth and reconciliation commission concluded in 2015 the failed government policy amounted to “cultural genocide”.

In January, Canada announced a C$31.5 billion (RM106 billion) agreement to reform its discriminatory child welfare system and compensate indigenous families who suffered because of it. – AFP, April 2, 2022

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