UBC Senate votes to rescind honorary degree given to bishop involved in residential schools - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 01:22 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

UBC Senate votes to rescind honorary degree given to bishop involved in residential schools

On Wednesday, the University of British Columbia's Vancouver Senate voted unanimously, with one abstention, to rescind an honorary degree given to a Catholic Bishop who oversaw residential schools in Kamloops and northern B.C.

John Fergus O'Grady was former principal of the Kamloops Indian Residential School

Bishop John Fergus O'Grady displays his honorary UBC law degree in 1986. Right: A letter from O'Grady to residential school students' parents in 1948. (Prince George Newspaper Archives/BCTF)

The University of British Columbia's Vancouver Senate voted Wednesday evening to rescind an honorary degree given to the late Catholic bishop John Fergus O'Grady, a priest and theformer principal of the Kamloops Indian Residential School where the Tkemlps te Secwpemc First Nationis investigatingpossible unmarked burial sites.

The honorary degree was bestowed in 1986, when O'Gradyretired after20 years as the head of the Prince George Diocese.

Katherine Hensel, a Secwpemc lawyer and legal counsel to the Tkemlps te SecwpemcNation, spoke before the senate's meeting and saidthe community appreciates UBC's efforts to address past mistakes.

"The pain is acute and it is helpful to have that acknowledged by UBC and other institutions," Henselsaid, adding that the investigation into possible gravesand the reckoningwithCanada's past is an ongoing, "arduous"process for Indigenous people.

Katherine Hensel, a Secwpemc lawyer and legal counsel to the Tkemlps te Secwpemc Nation, said the community appreciates UBC's efforts to address past mistakes. (Submitted by Hensel Barristers)

"It does remove a source of pain to survivors and to the community, and to all of us who are directly, inter-generationally and laterallyaffected by the legacy of residential schools," she said.

Professor Emeritus John Gilbert, who chairs the Senate TributesCommittee thatstudied O'Grady's role in the residential school system, said he was grateful the vote was passed.

"A very, very, very large thank you to everyone who responded to our report from across British Columbia, Canada and the world," he said.

"I think we all recognize that conversations like this will have to continue and I'm absolutely delighted that we have your 100 per cent support."

Wednesday's vote passed unanimously, with one abstention, and the move to rescind O'Grady's degree was one of three recommendations inan omnibus motion.

The second recommendationcalledon the university to conduct a historic reflection on:

  • its role in subjugating Indigenous people and communities.
  • the role its scholars played in producing evidence used to justify the mistreatment of Indigenous people in B.C. and Canada.
  • the disregard the academic community had for the "atrocities" committed in the name of the public of B.C.

In the third, the senate said UBC should do more to create conditions where:

  • residential school records can be preserved and studied.
  • students can be taught and shown the evidence of what happened in those schools.
  • the university can commit to learning and working towardsolutions in "a collective journey toward truth and reconciliation."

Controversial past

O'Grady's tenure at the Kamloops residential school came to light when a letter attributed to him was posted to the B.C. Teacher's Federation website and then shared widely on social media.

Dated Nov. 18, 1948, the letter tells parents that their children are expected back at the school by Jan. 3, once Christmas holidays end.

If the children are not returned to school on time they will not be allowed to go home from Christmas next year, reads the letter.

It goes on toinform parents that seeing their children over Christmas is a "privilege which is being granted" by the school and government.

O'Grady's legacy and that of many other individuals associated with Canada's residential school system is being re-evaluated since theTkemlps te Secwpemcannounced that ground penetrating radar had revealedpotential unmarked graves in Kamloops, B.C.

Julianne Walshaw, centre, dances with her daughter to mark the one-year anniversary of the discovery of potential burial sites at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School in Kamloops, B.C., in May 2022. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Since then,several otherFirst Nations across Canada said they, too, had found possible gravesites of children who wereforced to attend residential schools.

During Wednesday'ssenate meeting, UBC President and Vice Chancellor Santa Ono promised to see that a review of other honorary degrees given topeople who were involved in residential schools, or other racist and discriminatory practicessuch as Canadian internment camps, is "adequately resourced."