Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

UBC President Apologizes For ‘Failing To Confront' Over Residential Schools

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2018 12:06 PM
    VANCOUVER — The president of the University of British Columbia opened the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre on Monday with an apology to survivors for the school's role in perpetuating a harmful system.
     
     
    Santa Ono said universities bear part of the responsibility for the history because they trained many of the policy makers who administered the schools and tacitly accepted the silence surrounding them.
     
     
    Ono said failing to confront a heinous piece of history, even if the university didn't cause it, would mean becoming complicit in the ongoing harm.
     
     
    "That is why, today, on behalf of the UBC community, I apologize to you who were so affected by that system, for our participation in a system that has oppressed you, excluded you and that, through intention or inaction, continues to cause offence," he said in a statement.
     
     
    Ono said few Canadians are aware of the history of the residential school system or its lasting harmful effects. That ignorance is no accident, he added.
     
     
    "Expressions of Aboriginal culture were banned by Canadian law from 1885 to 1951, and only recently has significant attention been given to Aboriginal history, experience, and perspectives in school curricula at any education level," he said.
     
     
    The dialogue centre that was officially opened is intended to educate the public about the devastating impact of the residential school system.
     
     
    Cindy Tom-Lindley, a former resident school student and executive director of the Indian Residential School Survivor Society, said in a release that teaching and learning about Canada's past is the responsibility of all, not just First Nations.
     
     
    "It is my hope that people take advantage of this centre and education themselves so that we can all have a better understanding and help create a brighter future for generations to come."
     
     
    First Nations Summit Grand Chief Edward John said the centre will be an important reminder for Canadians, and a valuable path to reconciliation for residential school survivors.
     
     
    Ono said nearly every Indigenous family in Canada has been affected by the schools, and the effects on communities continue to this day.
     
     
    "Those who survived often left feeling distraught, alienated and angry," he said. "With no or limited experience of family life, and no means to address the trauma they had experienced, many transmitted the abuse they had endured to later generations."
     
     
    The two-storey centre was funded by $5.5 million in donations.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Launches Consultations Aimed At Ticket Price Gouging For Events, Concerts

    B.C. Launches Consultations Aimed At Ticket Price Gouging For Events, Concerts
    The B.C. government is launching public consultations aimed at clamping down on ticket scalping that drives up prices for music and sporting events.

    B.C. Launches Consultations Aimed At Ticket Price Gouging For Events, Concerts

    Multiple Injuries In Highway Collision

    Multiple Injuries In Highway Collision
    RCMP say at least five people have been injured in a head-on crash on the Trans-Canada Highway near Kamloops.

    Multiple Injuries In Highway Collision

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid After Altercation At Logan Lake, B.C., Motel

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid After Altercation At Logan Lake, B.C., Motel
     A 66-year-old British Columbia man has been charged with second-degree murder following an incident in a southern Interior community.

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid After Altercation At Logan Lake, B.C., Motel

    Canadian Pulse Farmers Hoping India, Canada Find Agreement By June

    Canadian pulse farmers are in the midst of deciding if it is even worth planting peas and lentils this spring, as steep tariffs from their No. 1 customer cut deep into their profit margins.

    Canadian Pulse Farmers Hoping India, Canada Find Agreement By June

    Two Surrey Men Charged With Murder In 2016 Death Of Vancouver Man

    Two Surrey Men Charged With Murder In 2016 Death Of Vancouver Man
    Surrey residents Gage McPake and Cody Stuiver are expected to appear in a Vancouver courtroom next Monday.

    Two Surrey Men Charged With Murder In 2016 Death Of Vancouver Man

    Overdose Deaths In B.C. Increase In January; Most In Vancouver, Victoria, Surrey

    Overdose Deaths In B.C. Increase In January; Most In Vancouver, Victoria, Surrey
    VANCOUVER — Illicit drug overdose deaths in British Columbia rose in January compared with December, with 125 people believed to have died from street narcotics or unprescribed medications.

    Overdose Deaths In B.C. Increase In January; Most In Vancouver, Victoria, Surrey