Dene Nation seeks approval to search 15 residential school sites for unmarked graves - Action News
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Dene Nation seeks approval to search 15 residential school sites for unmarked graves

Dene Nation is seeking leaders and delegates' approval to search archives, interview Elders and conduct ground-penetrating radar on sites where community members believe those who operated the schools buried their missing children and relatives.

Project would take two years, consult Elders and archives to identify sites

Tom Andrews and PhD student Rebecca Gray, who are working on the project to search for potential unmarked graves at residential schools sites, present to the Dene National Assembly on Wednesday. (Avery Zingel/CBC)

Warning: This story discusses children missing at residential schools.

Dene Nation is proposing to search 15 residential school sites in the North for unmarked burial sites, a plan which brought up complicated and difficult emotions about what this undertaking will mean for survivors and the family of missing children.

Elder and former Tulitachief Paul Andrew told the Dene Nation assembly, gathered just outside of Yellowknife this week,that he hopes the project brings closure to his family.

Andrew was at residential school for seven years, and his grandmother passed away without knowing what happened to her two daughters.

"I have often wondered what happened to them. Is it possible I have cousins somewhere in the world? Or is that it?"

"It's very possible that it will settle my soul if we are able to answer some of those questions," he said.

Paul Andrew says this type of project could bring some closure for people who have always wondered where their missing children are. (Alex Brockman/CBC)

Many Elders and delegates were concerned about resurfacing painful memories and asked for the discussion to be put off.

Dettah Elder Alfred Baillargeon said in Wldeh Yat that the Dene National Assembly is there to "make resolutions for the betterment of our people."

"I don't agree with talking about the burial sites while we are here."

Emotional supports necessary

The project team includes Gwichya Gwich'in professor Crystal Fraser, a renowned expert in residential school history at the University of Calgary, PhD student and Pehdzeh Ki First Nation member Rebecca Gray, and Dr. Brian Moorman, a "world expert" in ground penetrating radar, whohasexperience studying burial sites in Fort Providence and at Taltheilei Narrows.

Gray has worked on similar projects in the south.

"I feel very strongly that this work needs to have emotional support, spiritual support for anyone who is being involved in it," she said.

Research co-ordinator Tom Andrews told the delegation the project plan is to spend a year researching archives for potential unmarked grave sites, interviewing Elders and gathering names of students who were recorded ashavingdied in residential schools.

The ground-penetrating radar part of the project would take place in the second year, once the frost is off the ground, he said.

Dehcho Grand Chief Herb Norwegian said that if unmarked graves are found, "the big question is what would you do about that?" (Avery Zingel/CBC)

Dehcho Grand Chief Herb Norwegian said many of the children who died at residential schools like Sacred Heart in Fort Providence, would have been grandparents today with large families.

"Once you've confirmed that you have these graves, unmarked graves or human remains, the big question is what would you do about that?"

Establishing a protocol for when graves are identified is "probably something that Elders would want to take control of," he said.

Archival, Elders knowledge needed

Ground penetrating radar technology can view areas down to eight metres, but is most effective in the first two metres of soil, said Gray.

"It takes knowledge of the land and the histories within the community and the archives to understand the whole picture of what's going on there," said Gray.

Once begun, it will take months to interpret the results, said Andrews.

"If we build another body of knowledge that says that this area for sure had graves in it and then we find anomalies there through ground penetrating radar, we can be reasonably sure that those anomalies are in fact graves," he said.

This was the case in a 2003 search for graves in Fort Providence, which relied on archives, photographs and Elders interviews to identify the sites, he said.

In the 1940s, nuns dug up graves of priests and nuns to move them to a new cemetery, but never moved the remaining graves. The nuns turned the field to grow potatoes where the community now says their children are buried, said Andrews.

Shoes and a teddy bear in front of a large plaque bearing many names.
A monument in Fort Providence, N.W.T., memorializes around 300 people buried there, including 161 children who were brought to the school from up and down the Mackenzie River Valley. (Kate Kyle/CBC)

The community now has a commemorative plaque with the names of children who died, a plaque which Fort Good Hope Chief Tommy Kakfwi has visited three years in a row.

Three of his relatives never made it home, and are commemorated in Fort Providence.

Digging up the past

Kakfwi agreed with pausing the conversation and focusing on issues like youth and homelessness.

"We have important issues that are plaguing our community," he said. "Talking about the dead, is not going to bring anything productive to our youth today. We have concerns.

"I have to think about tomorrow, not dig up things from the past because it brings up a lot of hurt."

Fort Good Hope Chief Tommy Kakfwi and Colville Lake Chief Wilbert Kochon at Dene National Assembly. (Avery Zingel/CBC)

dl K First Nation Chief Kele Antoine told delegates that the community has already allocated funds to search sites including Lapointe Hall, which was demolished six years ago.

A preliminary scan of the area identified "mass anomalies."

Dehcho Grand Chief Herb Norwegian said that students at Lapointe Hall lived in a section that is "literally right over these graves."

Antoine asked whether Dene Nation could team up with his First Nation if delegates approve the project.

The assembly is expected to vote Thursday on whether the project should go ahead.

Kaagee Tu First Nation band councillor Terry Simba and dl K First Nation Chief Kele Antoine at the Dene National Assembly at the Wiliideh Site (Yellowknife River). (Avery Zingel/CBC)

Last fall, Dene Nation proposed Canada spend half a million dollars on the project.

The plan is to search 15 residential school grounds identified by the Truth and Reconciliation Committee: Immaculate Conception (Roman Catholic) and All Saints (Anglican) in Aklavik, Fleming Hall in Fort McPherson, Sacred Heart in Fort Providence, St. Joseph's in Fort Resolution, Bompas Hall (Anglican) in Fort Simpson and Deh Cho Lapointe Hall, St. Peter's in Hay River, Grollier Hall (Roman Catholic) and Stringer Hall (Anglican) in Inuvik, Akaitcho Hall in Yellowknife, Federal Hostel in Dln, and All Saints in Shingle Point, Yukon.


Support is available for anyone affected by the effects of residential schools, and those who are triggered by the latest reports.

TheIndian Residential School Survivors Society(IRSSS) can be contacted toll-free at 1-800-721-0066.

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.

In addition, the NWT Help Line offers free support to residents of the Northwest Territories, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It is 100% free and confidential. The NWT Help Line also has an option for follow-up calls. Residents can call the help line at 1-800-661-0844.

In Nunavut, theKamatsiaqtut Help Lineis open 24 hours a day at 1-800-265-3333. People are invited to call for any reason.