Sixties Scoop society launches in B.C. to support survivors - Action News
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British Columbia

Sixties Scoop society launches in B.C. to support survivors

The Sixties Scoop Indigenous Society of B.C. is dedicated to supporting Sixties Scoop survivors.

Using federal settlement money, Sixties Scoop Indigenous Society of B.C. aims to help healing, reunificatiion

Elizabeth Charlie and RavenSong Pamela Abraham of the Sixties Scoop Indigenous Society of British Columbia pictured in Vancouver on Monday. The organization hopes it can serve as a place for survivors to heal and to find help for reunification efforts with their home communities. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

It's taken years of work to get theSixties Scoop Indigenous Society of B.C. (SSISBC) off the ground.

The newly-launched organization isdedicated to supporting survivors of the Sixties Scoop, the catch-all name for a series of policiesthat saw thousands of Indigenous children takenby social workers, adoption agencies and churches and placed in mostly white foster and adoptivehomesbetween the 1950s and early 1990s.

The B.C. society hopes to connectsurvivors across the provinceand support them in healing from their experiences, as well as raise public awareness about the Sixties Scoop.

"We just want to be recognized Indigenous assimilation hasn't happened yet. Indigenous genocide hasn't happened yet, as hard as it's been pushed. We're still here," saidRavenSong Pamela Abraham, Vancouver-based president of the SSISBC.

"Just because we're missing from the reserves doesn't mean we're missing in life,"she added.

SSIBC joins other organizations, such as the national non-profit60s Scoop Legacy of Canada, in supporting and advocating forsurvivors of the Sixties Scoop.

According to the Sixties Scoop Network,over 22,500 First Nations, Inuit and Mtis children were forcibly taken as part of the practice, whichpeaked in the 1960s.It has beenwidely criticized as an attempt at forced assimilation by the colonial government.

Many families were never told where their children were taken.

"I would like to see us be able to facilitate reunification, and to facilitate some of us returning home, and being able to facilitate it in a way where we can assist them through the whole process," Abraham said.

Chief Marcia Brown Martel, the lead plaintiff in a class action lawsuit related to the Sixties Scoop, drums out of Centre Block on Parliament Hill in October 2017. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Settlement 'blood money' used to fund society

For Abraham, who was taken as a child from her home community of Fort Providence, N.W.T.,being a Sixties Scoop survivor is "like [being] a bird or an airplane, circling, looking for a place to land."

She says she is usingmoneyreceived from a 2017 class action settlement agreementwith survivorsto fund project costs for the society, including the domain name for their new website.

The settlement agreement set aside $750 million of federal money to compensate First Nations and Inuit children who were taken from their families between 1951 and 1991.

"I've been sitting on this money since it came in because, to me, it's blood money, and it's never going to give me back what I lost.But if I can help more of us to get back a little bit of what we lost, then we all win," said Abraham.

'They're not alone'

Elizabeth Charlie was working toward thesame goal of a support society long before she met Abraham about fouryears ago.

Taken fromtheKwakwaka'wakw First Nation on Vancouver Island as a child,Charlie says she knew nothing of the Sixties Scoop until her 20s, despite living through it herself.

Last year, the pair started meeting with other survivors across B.C., and started taking stepsto formally launch the society.

Long before they met, RavenSong Pamela Abraham and Elizabeth Charlie had thought of forming an organization dedicated to supporting Sixties Scoop survivors in B.C. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

"I think it's phenomenal Bringing all these different survivors together is pretty immense to witness," saidCharlie, who is vice-president of the new organization.

"I want to reach all the Sixties Scoopers and [let them] know they're not alone," she said. "I was alone in my healing for a long time."

Push for provincial apology

One of the organization's goals is to advocate for more recognition of the complex experiences of Sixties Scoop survivors in B.C.

They are also calling for outgoing B.C. Premier John Horganto issue a formal apology for the provincial government's role in enacting the policies, something Abraham describes asa starting point for reconciliation and an opportunity for Horgan.

"He's planning to [step down], and I think it would be a wonderful way for him to go out on a gesture of reconciliation, saying that we were all the same and we all count," Abraham said.

Premiers of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba have made similar apologies, andthere have been calls for a federal apology by the Sixties Scoop Network and the 60s Scoop Legacy of Canada.

An undated photo of Cleopatra Semaganis Nicotine, who was taken into government care in the early 1970s as part of the Sixties Scoop and adopted into non-Indigenous families in Canada and the United States. A CBC podcast, Finding Cleo, followed her Cree family's search for her 50 years later. (Provided by the Semaganis family)

SSISBC hasalso launched a food security program for elder survivors through a grant-funded partnership with B.C. Farmers' Markets: society members over 65 are eligible for coupons that can be used at a network of markets across the province to buy fresh produce and groceries.

"It's a start. It's a way of getting our feet wet and getting people to know who we are," saidAbraham.

Corrections

  • This story originally stated that the SSISBC was the only organization in B.C. operating to support survivors of the 60s Scoop. It has been updated to reflect the presence of other organizations operating in the province doing similar work.
    Jul 13, 2022 5:00 PM PT