Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
International

17-Metre Totem Pole Raised At UBC Honours First Nations Victimized By Residential Schools

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Apr, 2017 12:58 PM
    VANCOUVER — A 17-metre totem pole installed at the University of British Columbia is a permanent reminder of the strength and resilience of the countless children victimized by the residential school system, one survivor said.
     
    Elder Barney Williams used his remarks to a crowd gathered Saturday for the raising of the totem pole to talk about his experience of being raped and abused at a residential school on Meares Island, B.C.
     
    "This is real folks, this is not something we make up because we want sympathy," he said.
     
    The mistreatment of generations of indigenous people, he said, is a "Canadian problem, not just a First Nations problem."
     
    The Reconciliation Pole, carved by Haida Nation hereditary chief James Hart, honours the victims and survivors of Canada's residential school system.
     
    Hart said indigenous artists from across Canada contributed to carving the pole, recognizing the extent of the torment that the schools inflicted.
     
    "It's not about me, it's about all of us," he said. 
     
    The pole was carved from a 800-year-old red cedar tree on B.C.'s north coast. It's marked by thousands of copper nails representing the thousands of indigenous children who died in residential schools.
     
    It's designed in three sections, representing life before residential schools, during and after, Hart said.
     
    The pole located at the heart of the Vancouver campus, at the future site of the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre that is slated to open in the 2017-2018 academic year.
     
    Williams said it's more than just a symbol but an element of First Nations' culture and legacy that has endured despite the attempts of the residential school system to wipe out their traditions.
     
    "It's part of a celebration that says 'I'm still here, we're still here.' We weren't beaten down to the point where we became non-existent," he said in an interview.
     
    Adina Williams, a second-year student at the University of B.C. who is not related to Barney Williams, called the installation of the pole a "beginning" and said she hopes it teaches people about Canada's dark history.
     
    She said her father spent seven years in a residential school, yet growing up, she never learned about the system.
     
    "Throughout my years in high school and elementary school, there was very little acknowledgment of the residential school system. I think we spent a day on it in my social studies class in high school," she said in an interview.
     
    She said she hopes that's changing, and with the university adding this monument to the campus, there will be more awareness about the abuse people endured.
     
    "It makes me feel like that part of our history is being acknowledge, that the truth part of reconciliation is being known," she said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Second Funeral For Mosque Victims To Be Held In Quebec City Today

    Second Funeral For Mosque Victims To Be Held In Quebec City Today
    Mourners will gather to pay tribute to Mamadou Tanou Barry, Ibrahima Barry and Azzeddine Soufiane at the Quebec City convention centre.

    Second Funeral For Mosque Victims To Be Held In Quebec City Today

    Judge Wrong To Use Woman's Email To Police In Sex-Assault Conviction

    Judge Wrong To Use Woman's Email To Police In Sex-Assault Conviction
    In ordering a new hearing for Bo Zou, the Court of Appeal found the judge was wrong to view the email sent a day after the incident as confirmation of her account at trial.

    Judge Wrong To Use Woman's Email To Police In Sex-Assault Conviction

    Mental Health Evaluation For U.S. Man Accused Of Killing Canadian Girlfriend

    Mental Health Evaluation For U.S. Man Accused Of Killing Canadian Girlfriend
    SYRACUSE, N.Y. — An American man accused of killing his Canadian girlfriend in upstate New York will remain in jail as his lawyer arranges for a mental health evaluation.

    Mental Health Evaluation For U.S. Man Accused Of Killing Canadian Girlfriend

    Indian-American Puneet Ahluwalia To Run For Virginia House Of Delegates

    Indian-American Puneet Ahluwalia To Run For Virginia House Of Delegates
    Indian-American Republican leader from Virginia Puneet Ahluwalia is contesting for the state's House of Delegates for the 34th district against the incumbent Kathleen Murphy.

    Indian-American Puneet Ahluwalia To Run For Virginia House Of Delegates

    RBI Allows NRIs Access To Currency Derivatives Market

    RBI Allows NRIs Access To Currency Derivatives Market
    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has permitted non-residents Indians (NRIs) access to the exchange traded currency derivatives (ETCD) market to hedge currency risk arising out of their investments in India.

    RBI Allows NRIs Access To Currency Derivatives Market

    Indian-Aamerican Hotelier In US Guilty Of Underpaying Workers

    Indian-Aamerican Hotelier In US Guilty Of Underpaying Workers
    Indian-American hotelier, Chandubhai Patel, has been convicted in a scheme to underpay workers at two of his establishments, a federal prosecutor announced said.

    Indian-Aamerican Hotelier In US Guilty Of Underpaying Workers