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Head of Kainai Wellness talks about Canada’s former residential schools

PINCHER CREEK, AB – Many people are speaking out following the discovery of the bodies of 215 children at a former residential school in Kamloops, BC.

Flags have been lowered across the country to honour those young lives lost and there have been nightly vigils over the past week, including one in Lethbridge on Monday evening.

Terri-Lynn Fox with the Kainai Wellness Centre says it’s important we all understand the impact these schools had and still have today on Indigenous people across Canada.

“We need to do it in a good way through ceremonies, by acknowledging our traditional teachings and as a collective,” says Fox. “We can not do it alone. We need everyone onboard, we need people to walk with us. Walk on this journey with us so everyone understands the process of healing and reconciliation.”

Fox says what happened in Kamloops hits close to home for so many first Nations people. She herself has been impacted with both her parents attending residential schools.

She says words and apologies are one thing, it’s time for action. “We can not move forward if we don’t take action. Government has to take responsibility and they have to know that the preceding generations deserve that.”

Fox notes these schools have had a generational impact on First Nations people all across the country.

On the Blood Tribe, there were two church-run schools on the reserve St. Paul’s Anglican and St. Mary’s Roman Catholic.

Alberta government commits to find unmarked Indigenous graves

The provincial government will commit funding to a program to uncover any undocumented burial sites at former residential schools in Alberta.

The decision comes after the discovery of the bodies at the residential school site in Kamloops.

The Minister of Indigenous Relations, Rick Wilson says details will be announced in the coming days. He says many of his friends as a youth went to residential schools.

Wilson says he can’t imagine his children being taken away to such institutions.

Patrick Siedlecki
Patrick Siedlecki
Pat has been a mainstay in the CJOC News department from the time the station launched in 2007. He's been in the position of News Director since then and has been anchoring daily news casts as well as reporting and working behind the scenes. Community is important to him and keeping CJOC listeners and readers informed about what's happening across southern Alberta and beyond. Pat has been in radio broadcasting for the past 24 years, starting in Port Alberni on Vancouver Island in 1997 and then moving up island to Nanaimo for another few years before heading to Lethbridge in 2007. Pat grew up in the small Saskatchewan farming town of Foam Lake. After high school, he went to Western Academy Broadcasting College (WABC) in Saskatoon prior to moving to the island. Pat also spent several years broadcasting hockey in the BCHL as well as seven years as the radio voice of the Lethbridge Hurricanes in the WHL. Pat has been working at Cornerstone Funeral Home in Lethbridge as a Certified Life Celebrant and Funeral Assistant since 2016. News and sports have always been Pat's passion from the time he was a teenager and he's always been grateful to have had the opportunity to make that part of what's been a fun and long radio career!
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