Artist behind Vancouver shoe display commemorating residential school victims reflects on past year - Action News
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British Columbia

Artist behind Vancouver shoe display commemorating residential school victims reflects on past year

Dozens of people marked the anniversary of the display of shoes on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery Saturday, placed there aftersuspected unmarked graves were discovered on the grounds of a former residential school in Kamloopslast year.

Haida artist arranged 215 pairs of shoes on art gallery steps following suspected unmarked graves discovery

Some of the 215 pairs of shoes placed by Haida artist Tamara Bell on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery, pictured on Saturday, May 28, 2022. People gathered at the gallery to reflect on the year that has passed since the shoes were first arranged. (Murray Titus/CBC News)

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

Dozens of people marked the anniversary of the display of shoes on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery Saturday, placed there aftersuspected unmarked graves were discovered on the grounds of a former residential school in Kamloopslast year.

On Saturday, Haida artistTamara Bell, along with others, held a ceremony to reflect on the year that has passed since she arranged 215 pairs of shoes on the steps of the art gallery, a former provincial courthouse.

She placed the shoes to represent the more than 200 children whose unmarked graves were believed to have been discovered with ground-penetrating radar earlier in May 2021 by the Tkemlps te Secwpemc First Nation at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School site.

"A reminder of the number of children who have been discovered at sites across the country at residential schools," said Bell. "We have to get to the truth before we can get to reconciliation and without truth, reconciliation is impossible."

After Bell installed the 215 shoes on May 28, 2021, many people in the city gathered at the site to reflect on the discovery and added other shoes, stuffed animals, toys and artwork as a way to cope with the discovery in Kamloops.

A woman in a conical Haida hat and regalia stands beside a poster that has the word  'Invisible' crossed out and replaced with the word 'visible.'
Tamara Bell is the Haida artist who arranged 215 pairs of shoes at the Vancouver Art Gallery on May 28, 2021, to commemorate the children whose potential graves were found on the grounds of a former residential school in Kamloops. (Murray Titus/CBC News)

The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) has said about 4,100 children died at residential schools in Canada, but that the actual total is much higher.

A large number of Indigenous children who were forcibly sent to residential schools never returned home.

The discovery in Kamloops in May 2021 began a national reckoning over Canada's past and its treatment of Indigenous people. Many other nations have since made additional discoveries of suspected unmarked graves across the country.

Other memorials, similar to the one in Vancouver, were set up in other cities across Canada.

On Monday, a large ceremony marking the anniversary of the discovery in Kamloops was held by the Tkemlps te Secwpemc First Nation, which was attended by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Governor General of Canada Mary Simon.

"People don't really understand or grasp the significance of the trauma over 500 years that Indigenous people have suffered through," said Bell on Saturday on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery.

A woman carries flowers on May 28, 2021 to be placed with 215 pairs of children's shoes on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery as a memorial to the preliminary discovery of the remains of 215 children found buried at the site of a former residential school in Kamloops.
A woman carries flowers on May 28, 2021, to be placed with 215 pairs of children's shoes on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

She hopes the memorial will help encourage the change needed from Canadians to recognize the country's colonial past and achieve reconciliation as set out by the NCTR.

William Nahanee, a residential school survivor, was at the art gallery on Saturday.

"We have a better opportunity, I believe as a survivor, that First Nations people, given the proper opportunity, can become a proper part of this growing Canadian society that we all want," he said.

The Kamloops Indian Residential School ran from 1890 to 1969, when the federal government took over administration from the Catholic Church to operate it as a residence for a day school, until it closed in 1978.

As many as 500 children from First Nations communities across B.C. and beyond would have been registered at the school at any given time, according to the NCTR.

Support is available for anyone affected by their experience at residential schools or by the latest reports.

A national Indian Residential School Crisis Line has been set up to provide support for former students and those affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by calling the 24-hour national crisis line: 1-866-925-4419.


Do you have information about unmarked graves, children who never came home or residential school staff and operations? Email your tips to CBC's new Indigenous-led team investigating residential schools: WhereAreThey@cbc.ca.

With files from Yasmin Gandham and Courtney Dickson