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Ottawa

Indigenous Sixties Scoop adoptees rally on Parliament Hill

Indigenous people who were adopted during what's known as the Sixties Scoop rallied on Parliament Hill Friday in a show of solidarity with other adoptees, and to put pressure on the federal government to reform the child welfare system.

More than 20,000 Indigenous children removed from their families from 1960s to 1980s

Sixties Scoop adoptees gathered for a rally on Parliament Hill on Friday. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

Indigenous people who were adopted during the Sixties Scoop rallied on Parliament Hill Friday insolidarity with other adoptees across Canada, andto put pressure on the federal government to reform the Indigenouschild welfare system.

"We are here to celebrate our survival of the child welfare (system), and to raise those issues," said organizer Duane Morrisseau-Beck."The message to those survivors is that you're not alone, and that we're really working hard to find some answers."

From the 1960s to the 1980s, an estimated 20,000 Indigenous children were removed from their families and placedwith non-Indigenous familiesoften far from their home communities during what's known as the Sixties Scoop.
Duane Morrisseau-Beck reconnected with his birth mother, Geraldine Beck, in 1997. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)

Morrisseau-Beck was apprehended by child welfare authorities in Manitoba at birth in 1968.In 1997 he reconnected with his birth mother, Geraldine Beck, whojoined him at the Ottawa rally.

"It's almost like I was away for a long time, and then I returned home," he said."It was a seamless process, it just took time to get to know who I was and who my community is, and just sort of go through that validation. And some days I continue to do that."

Open letter to the prime minister

He's part of a group of Sixties Scoop adoptees in Ottawa who have been gathering regularly to create a wider support network of Indigenous people who were removed from their families and culture as children.

The groupissued an open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeaulast winter, requesting roundtable discussions to develop a national strategy to provide supports for adoptees and address the high number of Indigenous children currently in care across Canada. It has yet to receive a response.

Rawd Belanger, from Yorkton, Sask., came to Ottawa for the first time for this rally."I was apprehended at a very young age age three. So this had been an issue with myself most of my adult life," he said.

"So I'm just starting to get to a place in my life where I'm starting to realize that this is something that needs to be dealt with. Not just with myself, but with my family and other First Nations people that have been apprehended during this era."

'It's now out in the open'

Rawd Belanger was adopted out into a non-Indigenous family at age three. (Waubgeshig Rice/CBC)
Now 55, Belanger says connecting with other adoptees across Canada has had a profoundly positive influence on him."I'm finding now that at my age, I wish I would have had that opportunity to experience this at a much younger age."

Beverley Jones, who was taken from her family at two months old andgrew up in Souris, Man., believes awareness of the Sixties Scoop is increasing. "It's now out in the open and in the public, and we can do something about it now. I felt like I was alone all the time before," she said.

Following the afternoon rally, organizers held a community feast with a documentary screening and musical performances at St. Paul's-Eastern United Church. Morrisseau-Beck said events like these will be ongoing.

"We're really looking forward to welcoming people from across the country as we bring this issue to the attention of Canadians," he said.