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Toronto

Priest under fire after sermon on the 'good done' by Catholic Church on residential schools

A Mississauga, Ont., priestis under fire after a sermon referencing the "good done" by the Roman Catholic Church in residential schools, saying some might go so far as to even thank it.

Clips of last Sunday's controversial sermon widely criticized on social media

Rev. Owen Keenan, a Roman Catholic priest in Mississauga, Ont., west of Toronto, gives daily mass at the Merciful Redeemer Parish on June 15, 2021. He is under fire for comments about residential schools he made in a recent sermon. (Merciful Redeemer Parish/YouTube)

A Mississauga, Ont., priestis under fire after a sermon referencing the "good done" by the Roman Catholic Church in residential schools, saying some might go so far as to even thank it.

During his sermon at theMerciful Redeemer Parish last Sunday, MonsignorOwen Keenan referenced theKamloops, B.C., residential school where theTk'emlps te SecwpemcFirst Nation reported it had discovered thepreliminary remains of more than 200 childrenin unmarked gravesin May.

"Two-thirds of the country is blaming the church, which we love, for the tragedies that occurred there," he said on a video originally posted to the church's YouTube page but sincedeleted. Clips of his sermon continue to circulate on social media.

"I presume the same number would thank the church for the good done in those schools, but of course, that question was never asked and we are not allowed to even say thatgood was done there. I await to see what comes to my inbox."

'Extremely harmfulto reconciliation'

A clip of Keenan's comments sparked outrage onsocial media, with one person tweeting that the priest's comments were "really disgusting" and that "the Church is not the victim."

Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie, a practising Catholic,said she was "extremely disappointed" by her pastor's comments about residential schools.

Reading from a prepared statement at a news conference Thursday, the mayor called Keenan'shomily "deeply insensitive to Indigenous Canadians, particularly at a time when Indigenous communities are in pain as they unearth more mass graves at the sites offormer residential schools."

"His comments show a fundamental misunderstanding of one of the core tragedies of the residential school system in Canada," she said."The children were forcibly separated from their parents."

Crombie saidhow Canada's history has been taught obscures the truth behind what really happened: The federal government and many churches, including the Catholic Church,operated these schools for closeto 150 years, committing atrocities and silencing voices forever.

"No apology from the federal government or the church will be enoughto undo the havoc that was wreakedthrough these institutions," Crombie said."But an apology is where we must start. It's a basic and it's a fundamental foundation to our reconciliation."

Dr. Suzanne Shoush, who is Indigenous,works for the Catholic-run health network Unity Health Toronto. Sheis demandingthe Popeapologize for the church's role in residential schools. She saidcomments like those made by Keenan are damaging to reconciliation and exemplify why Catholicleaders need to intervene.

"This is part of the reason why we keep pushing to have a formal asking of forgiveness to Indigenous people in Canada from the Pope himself," she said.

"It's really critical that it comes from the leadership so that we stop having these incredibly ignorant and harmful comments coming fromacross the church. I think that what we're seeing is extremely harmful to reconciliation."

An undated photo of Kamloops residential school students and a priest. (National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation)

Keenan also saidin his sermonthat while the church should apologize for its participation in the "ill-devised government project," it should alsowait to find out who was buried at the Kamloops site and why before "rendering ultimate judgment."

During a mass on June 6, Keenan said the discovery was "very sad" and a symbol of the "ongoing tragedy" of governmentpolicies against Indigenous people, but also that:

"We don't know how those children died. We don't know, we can't know, if they would've died if they stayed at home."

While he called for prayers and reconciliation, he also said, "Many people had very positive experiences of residential schools. Many people received health care and education and joyful experiences.

"They weren't universally awful. But there's still no place for the horrors that are alleged to have occurred there."

Residential school survivors have shared horrific accounts of abuse, starvation and neglect, and difficulties getting documentsfrom the Catholic Church, which ran the majority of the schools. Thefinal 2015 report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission begins by statingthat what took place at residential schools "can be best described as 'cultural genocide.'"

"The church actively sought to exercise exclusive control over the welfare of these children and therefore are exclusively responsible for the conditions which these children lived in," Shoush said.

In a statement to CBC News Wednesday, Keenan defended his comments, sayingthathe was trying to help his congregation struggling with negative news about the church.

"I am deeply sorry, embarrassed, ashamed and shocked at the revelations of abuse, destruction and harm done in residential schools across this country," he said in the statement. "I in no way condone the system ... As a Catholic and a priest, I wish I could say 'I'm sorry' to everyone who suffered harm."

The Archdiocese of Toronto said in a statement it's been in contact with Keenan "to convey the deep pain and anger" some felt. He has "pledged to fully educate himself" about the history of residential schools.

"We apologize to anyone offended by his remarks," the archdiocese said.

Pastor criticizes Pride flags at schools

In the same sermon, Keenan criticized Catholic schools for flyingPride flags this month, saying the church had hoped they'd show "courage" by displaying a cross or sacred heart instead. He described the Pride flag as "the standard of contemporary sexual licence" that's replacing Catholic symbols.

Keenan did not respond to questions from CBC Newsabout his comments toward the LGBTQcommunity.

Crombie said she told Keenan his comments have no place in the city of Mississauga.

"He expressed his shame and remorse," she said.

Keith Baybayon says schools help make LGBTQ students feel more included and safe by flying the Pride flag. (Jared Thomas/CBC)

LGBTQ activist Keith Baybayon, who is also a student trustee with the Toronto Catholic District School Board, saidmembers of the Catholic Church have ramped up these kinds of comments as more Ontario school boards agree to fly Pride flags every June. The flag holdsa special meaning of inclusionfor the LGBTQcommunitythat the cross doesn't, he said.

"Flying the Pride flag can really express solidarity that the school boards have with their LGBTQ students and staff, ensuring that they belong, their voices are heard," Baybayon said.

"We're not taking away the cross. We're not taking away the sacred heart. They're all going up there to ensure that every single person is represented in our board."