Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

UBC reviews awarding of honorary degree to bishop

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 May, 2021 02:07 PM
  • UBC reviews awarding of honorary degree to bishop

The University of British Columbia is reviewing its awarding of an honorary degree to a Roman Catholic bishop who was once a principal at a residential school where the remains of over 200 children have been discovered.

The university says it's aware of "community concerns" related to the degree conferred in 1986 to John O'Grady after specialists using ground-penetrating radar found grave shafts at the site of the former residential school in Kamloops.

It says in a statement that the discovery of the remains is deeply upsetting and being taken seriously by the university, which is located on the traditional and unceded territories of two First Nations.

A spokesman says a review by UBC's senate has been expedited and the process will include consultation with Indigenous communities and academic experts.

The university provided a statement issued by its then-president David Strangway at a convocation ceremony in May 1986, when O'Grady was introduced by his middle name, Fergus, and hailed for making education more accessible to local communities in the Interior and bringing "native and white communities closer together."

The university says it's among post-secondary institutions that bear part of the responsibility for the tragic history linked with residential schools because it trained many of the policy-makers and administrators who operated the facilities.

"We have made mistakes, and we cannot presume that we will not make more mistakes in the future," it says in a statement.

"Our commitment is to learn from our mistakes and, together, to continue to move forward in partnership with Indigenous peoples. Our commitment, as a university, and as a community of many members, must be strong, and must always result in meaningful action. This is our realization and it is our duty to act."

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds open loan program for Black entrepreneurs

Feds open loan program for Black entrepreneurs
The Black Entrepreneurship Loan Fund will provide loans of up to $250,000 for businesses that are majority Black-owned, or entrepreneurs for their startups or existing for-profit small businesses.

Feds open loan program for Black entrepreneurs

Trudeau vows support after unmarked graves found

Trudeau vows support after unmarked graves found
Trudeau offered sombre words today about the remains of 215 children on the grounds of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School, calling it "heartbreaking news."    

Trudeau vows support after unmarked graves found

63 per cent of B.C. residents have one COVID shot

63 per cent of B.C. residents have one COVID shot
Officials say there has been a COVID-19 outbreak at a long-term care facility, Brookside Lodge in Surrey, where one resident and a staff member have tested positive.    

63 per cent of B.C. residents have one COVID shot

CN Rail fined $100,000 for pesticide on B.C. track

CN Rail fined $100,000 for pesticide on B.C. track
British Columbia's Conservation Officer Service says Canadian National Railway has entered a guilty plea in a Prince Rupert court for failing to obtain the needed authorization to apply pesticide along its tracks.

CN Rail fined $100,000 for pesticide on B.C. track

317 COVID cases for Friday

317 COVID cases for Friday
3,106,269 doses of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in B.C., 160,885 of which are second doses.

317 COVID cases for Friday

Canada's First Program in Sikh Studies

Canada's First Program in Sikh Studies
With over 700,000 Sikhs in the country, it is no surprise that the time has come to reflect and represent Sikhism in the education system. Hoping to accomplish just this, the University of Calgary is soon slated to launch the nation’s first-of-its-kind Sikh Studies program, spearheaded by a dynamic duo. 

Canada's First Program in Sikh Studies