15 thoughts on “Canadian native children, a cruel history

      • 9 March 2013

        On “Thousands of native children died in Canada’s residential schools”

        In 1999 The Canadian Holocaust reports there were 50,000 children who died as a result of being forced into residential schools, and the deaths continue as a result of social conditions that exist among the Natives.

        What about the United States? There were 154 deaths at the Indian Boarding School in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, on the Chippewa Reservation in the early 1900s where I grew up. We are talking one small town. Not a lot of information is readily available on the topic. Start adding the numbers. It would probably far exceed 3,000.

        Marsha S
        Michigan, USA
        8 March 2013

        http://wsws.org/en/articles/2013/03/12/corr-m12.html

  1. Australia Apologizes to Victims of Forced Adoptions

    Canberra, Mar 21 (Prensa Latina) The Australian Government apologized to victims of forced adoptions made in 1950-1970.

    In a speech before Parliament, Prime Minister Julia Gillard said “We apologize to you, the mothers who suffered a system that gave you no alternative and were subject of manipulation, mistreatment and malpractice.”

    Ordered by religious groups in the post-war period, the forced adoptions left a trail of pain and suffering to thousands of minors and their relatives.

    The Upper Chamber adopted the decision to apologize for that black chapter of Australian history in the wake of revelation that 225,000 babies had gone through that situation in 1951-1975, when they were removed from their families.

    The forced adoptions involved single and indigenous mothers, from which the government got documents, mostly by fraudulent means, so that they gave up their children.

    The victims were confined in shelters or religious facilities and considered a stigma in society.

  2. Aboriginal group treks to Ottawa

    CANADA: Nearly 300 young aboriginal people completed a 1,000-mile trek from Hudson Bay to Ottawa on Monday to protest against living conditions on reservations.

    Hundreds more supporters joined them outside Parliament Hill.

    There have been a number of aboriginal protests in recent months.

    The Idle No More movement began last year in protest at a federal budget Bill that would alter the approval process for leasing aboriginal lands to outsiders and weaken environmental oversight in favour of natural resource extraction.

    http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/news/content/view/full/131045

  3. Pingback: Liebster Award, thank you Sue! | Dear Kitty. Some blog

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