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Government of Canada committed cultural genocide, says commission

Stripped of self-respect and identity - Government still silent
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report issues in Ottawa Wednesday found that students were often physically and sexually abused at Residential Schools overseen by the Government of Canada
 
A Commission study has found rules that required Canadian aboriginals to attend state-funded church schools were responsible for "cultural genocide".
 
The report found that First Nations children were "Stripped of their self-respect and they were stripped of their identity," said Murray Sinclair, Commission chair and one of the study's authors.

More than 130 residential schools operated across Canada.
 
The Canadian government forced more than 150,000 First Nation children to attend these schools from the 19th Century until the 1970s. The schools sought to integrate the children into mainstream Canadian society, but in doing so rid them of their native culture.
 
The policies have been cited as a major factor in an epidemic of substance abuse on reservations. Students said they were beaten for speaking their native language and were separated from their parents and customs.
 
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission issued 94 recommendations
 
Silence has largely been the government’s official response to the 94 recommendations released Tuesday by the commission, whose nearly six-year examination of Canada’s residential-schools history resulted in calls for sweeping reforms to government policy and a conclusion that the system amounted to “cultural genocide.”
 
Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued a historic apology in parliament in 2008, acknowledging the physical and sexual abuse that took place in the schools.
 
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which wrote the report, was created in 2006 as part of a $5 billion bn class action settlement between the government, churches and the 90,000 surviving First Nation students.
 
The report issued 94 recommendations including an investigation into missing and murdered aboriginal women and an apology from Pope Francis on behalf of the Catholic Church.
 
 
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