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First Nation says 751 unmarked graves found at Saskatchewan residential school site

Cowessess First Nation said the number is the highest, to date, found in Canada. 
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A 1956 photograph of the parish church in Marieval, Sask., is shown in this handout image provided by Société historique de Saint-Boniface. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Société historique de Saint-Boniface

COWESSESS FIRST NATION — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he was terribly saddened to learn up to 751 unmarked graves were found at the site of a former residential school in southeastern Saskatchewan.

Cowessess First Nation announced today that a search that began earlier this month with ground-penetrating radar had found the graves at the former Marieval Residential School.

It said the number is the highest, to date, found in Canada. 

“The hurt and the trauma that you feel is Canada’s responsibility to bear, and the government will continue to provide Indigenous communities across the country with the funding and resources they need to bring these terrible wrongs to light,” Trudeau said in a statement.

Cowessess First Nation Chief Cadmus Delorme said the radar search, done in collaboration with Saskatchewan Polytechnic school, has a 10- to 15-per-cent error rate. 

“But we do know there are at least 600 (graves),” he said. 

The existence or number of the graves does not come as a surprise to survivors of the school, he said.

“Over the past years, the oral stories of our elders, of our survivors, and friends of our survivors, have told us --- they knew these burials were here,” said Delorme.

“We always knew there was graves here.”

At a virtual news conference, he showed a photo of a grassy field with hundreds of coloured markers sticking out of the ground.

"The grave site is there and it is real," he said. "There are 751 flags."

Last month, a First Nation in British Columbia announced that ground-penetrating radar had found what are believed to be the remains of 215 children buried on the grounds of a former residential school in Kamloops. The school was once the largest in Canada's residential-school network.

An estimated 150,000 First Nations, Inuit, and Métis children attended residential schools between the 1860s and 1996. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission documented stories from survivors and families and issued a report in 2015.

The report detailed mistreatment at the schools, including emotional, physical, and sexual abuse of children, and said there were at least 4,100 deaths.

The Cowessess school, about 160 kilometres east of Regina, was built in 1899 by Roman Catholic missionaries. Delorme said it closed in 1996.

He said there may have been markers or headstones on the graves at one point, but they were removed in the 1960s.

“The Catholic Church representatives removed these headstones, and today they are unmarked graves,” he said.

The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Delorme said he's hoping to get access to school records held by the church and has “full faith” the records will be released.

The search for remains will continue, he said. While the discovered unmarked graves were found within the bounds of a Roman Catholic grave site, he said survivors believe people who were not baptized or too young to be baptized were buried outside the grounds

The next task will be putting a name to each of the bodies.

“We want to honour our loved ones that lay there today,” he said. “We want to make sure that we keep that place and preserve it so many could come here and heal.”

Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations, which represents 74 First Nations in Saskatchewan, said the graves provide “evidence of what the survivors of the Indian Residential Schools have been saying all along for decades.”

“We are seeing the results of the genocide that Canada committed here,” said Cameron. “Genocide on our treaty lands. 

“We will find more bodies and we will not stop until we find all of our children. We will do a search of every Indian Residential School site and we won’t stop there.”

Cameron said the federation also intends to search the grounds of sanatoriums, so-called "Indian hospitals" and “all the sites where our people were taken and abused, tortured, neglected and murdered.”

He said survivors and their descendants will need time to “heal and get stronger.”

“We are not asking for pity, but we are asking for understanding,” he said. “We need time to heal, and this country must stand by us.” 

The Indian Residential Schools Resolution Health Support Program has a hotline to help residential school survivors and their relatives suffering trauma invoked by the recall of past abuse. The number is 1-866-925-4419.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 24, 2021.

— By Julia Peterson in Saskatoon

The Canadian Press

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