In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s (the TRC) findings were released –the product of six years’ intensive and collaborative hard work. Together, the four reports (The Executive Summary, Principles of Truth and Reconciliation, Survivors Speak and Calls to Action) provide a roadmap by which justice may be reached for the survivors of Canada’s residential school system, as well as their families and communities. These findings approach access to justice through the lens of reconciliation – a concept explored below. The following paragraphs outline the goals of the TRC, its activities, findings, and questions that remain unanswered even after this massive undertaking.
Download the TRC Reports here.
The TRC is a commission created pursuant to the terms of a massive multi-party settlement agreement spawned as a result of Canada’s Indian Residential School (IRS) system.
The IRS was a system of boarding schools Indigenous Canadian children were forced to attend between the late 1800’s until the 1990’s. The schools were funded by the Canadian government and administered by Christian churches. While promoted as an educational model for remote Indigenous populations, the IRS system was a tool of cultural genocide: it was a policy that sought to assimilate Indigenous children into the dominant Canadian culture by removing them from the influence of their families and culture. IRS were part of a wider Canadian policy with the primary objective of eliminating Canada’s Indigenous peoples by ignoring their rights, terminating treaties and assimilating Indigenous peoples through eliminating their distinct legal, social, cultural, religious entities (The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Honouring the Truth, Reconciling for the Future: Summary of the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, 2015) [TRC Summary] at 1, 3, 54, 55 and 133).
Students who attended residential schools often experienced appalling and painful experiences. Aside from the culturally-motivated horrors – being taken from their parents, separated from siblings, and disallowing language, cultural or spiritual expression – many children experienced significant abuse, hunger and “institutionalized…neglect” (TRC Summary at 43). Survivors describe living in a world “dominated by fear, loneliness, and lack of affection” (TRC Summary at 41). It is estimated that approximately 150,000 pupils (including First Nations, Inuit and Métis children) attended IRS. At least 4,000 children died there. On June 11, 2008, Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized on behalf of the Government of Canada and the leaders of the other federal parties in the Canadian House of Commons (TRC Summary at 211).
The IRS system and its abominable harms lead to a flood of legal actions. This resulted in the largest class action settlement in Canadian history – the IRSSA. The IRSSA is a settlement package reached by the Canadian government, the Church and IRS survivors. It is intended to recognize the damage inflicted by the IRS system, and provide a framework by which IRS survivors might be able to access justice.
The IRSSA established a significant ($2 billion) compensation package. However, the systemic devastation caused by IRS cannot be remedied through mere compensation. As such, the IRSSA also contains more holistic community and reconciliation-oriented terms. It possesses 5 main features:
(i) Common Experience Payment- payment for each former student of the IRS.
(ii) Independent Assessment Process- Special compensation payable to survivors subjected to physical or sexual abuse.
(iii) Aboriginal Healing Foundation- Mandated “support initiatives” that aim to address the destructive legacy of the IRS.
(iv) The Settlement Agreement- The federal government’s agreement to fund initiatives to commemorate” the IRS experience.
(v) The TRC- The creation of a commission that will tell Canadians about the history of the IRS and its impact on Aboriginal peoples as a way to guide reconciliation.
(TRC Summary at 130).
The TRC’s mandate was to
(TRC Summary at 23)
The TRC approached this task with a multi-pronged approach. In facilitating reconciliation, the TRC:
Reconciliation does not yield itself to one definition. It is a deeply individualized concept that means different things to different people, communities, institutions, and organizations. For many survivors of the IRS system, reconciliation often involves coming to terms with (violent and disturbing) past events in a way that overcomes conflict and establishes a respectful and healthy relationship going forward.
The TRC viewed reconciliation as the establishment and maintenance of a mutually respectful relationship between all Canadians. Its mandate describes the process of reconciliation as:
An ongoing individual and collective process, and will require commitment from all those affected including First Nations, Inuit, and Metis former Indian Residential Schools students, their families, communities, religious entities, former school employees, government and the people of Canada. Reconciliation may occur between any of the above groups (TRC at 16).
Reconciliation is not a one-way street. It can only happen when everyone (survivors, perpetrators, and the broader public) accept responsibility for healing in ways that foster respect. Reconciliation is not paternalistic – it cannot proceed from the false assumption that only Indigenous lives need healing. For the conversation of reconciliation to take place, everyone involved must adopt an attitude of humility and respect (TRC Summary at 9-10).
The concept of reconciliation is particularly complex in this situation because of the inextricable link between the IRS system and colonialism generally. Reconciliation is often viewed as the re-establishment of a healthy and respectful relationship between parties. For many Indigenous Canadians, however, they have never experienced a healthy and respectful relationship with the Canadian government or its colonial settlers.
Since arriving in Canada, colonial powers drew on shifting doctrines to argue that the land occupied by Indigenous peoples for thousands of years was rightfully “discovered”, “conquered”, “occupied” or “possessed” by the English or French governments. These doctrines were not satisfactory or correct at law. Ultimately, the colonialists resorted to a system of treaties which were used to demonstrate that Indigenous lands were ceded to them by agreement. Significant controversy still exists as to whether, or to what extent, the colonial powers actually intended to fulfill their obligations in these treaties (for example, see TRC Summary at 45). Thus, the distrustful relationship between Indigenous persons and the federal government began (see generally, TRC Summary at 43–50).
Indigenous education formed an integral part of these broader colonial objectives. Colonial powers, with Christian missionaries in tow, viewed themselves as superior to other races. Given their perceived special status above all others, it gave them the right and duty to educate and civilize the “heathen” (TRC at Summary 46). Residential schools were established in the shadows of these ideas (TRC at Summary 47).
Thus, the IRS system is but one painful aspect of the tense historical relationship between Indigenous peoples and the Canadian government. Reconciliation, therefore, is not so much on re-establishing a respectful relationship, as locating common and equal ground from which all Canadians can move forward together (TRC at 6).
The IRS system caused systemic trauma that has reverberated across generations. Its ripple effect continues to wreak havoc on Indigenous communities. The IRSSA recognized that government-sanctioned harm of this magnitude cannot be resolved in a courtroom – it must occur with the entire Canadian community. The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) is one pillar of this broader reconciliation process.
The TRC established the NCTR as part of its IRSSA-driven mandate. It selected the University of Manitoba, as the NCTR’s permanent home (TRC Summary at 37-8) The NCTR will-
Reconciliation can also be viewed as an environmental law or the environment health practice in process. Reconciliation, in an Indigenous perspective, is neither just all about talking, nor only about people. It includes the earth as a reconciliatory component. This aspect of reconciliation requires a reconciling with the natural world. According to both Elder Reg Crowshoe and Elder Augustine, reconciliation is also comprised of our relationships (with) earth and all living things. Elder Crowshoe says that reconciliation is incomplete if human beings resolve problems between themselves and continue to destroy natural world. Thus it accords with reason that, reconciliation also includes both the environment and environmental and social regulatory regimes created to care for, and manage, the earth (Environmental Law) (TRC Summary at 18).
Canada is not the first country that has adopted and used a Truth and Reconciliation Commission as a healing tool to reconcile a country with a troubled past and an oppressed population. Perhaps most famously, South Africa used reconciliatory processes to heal some of the wounds caused by the apartheid regime. Reconciliation has thus become an international legal concept. It is particularly connected to the context of colonialism and the relationship between a state, its indigenous peoples, and the colonial settlers.
In 2007, the United Nations (UN) issued a declaration that specifically addressed the rights of the Indigenous Peoples of the world. And it is in the light of the foregoing declaration that, the TRC, in its 2012 Interim Report, enjoined the federal, the Provincial and Territorial governments and all parties to the IRSSA to explore the UNs’ declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples, because it contains the essential “principles, norms and standards for reconciliation”. (TRC at 21. For the UNs’ Declaration see: The United Nations, “United Nations Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples”).
In large part, the TRC used story telling as a method of reconciliation. Story telling is the process by which IRS- Survivors (including their families and communities) inform and educate other Canadians about the IRS experience and their adverse impacts.
For example, Ina Seitcher, a Survivor, who attended the Christie residential school, told his story:
I went [to Christie residential school]…for ten months. Ten months that impacted my life for fifty years. I am just now on my healing journey…I need to do this, I need to speak out…for my mom and dad who went to residential school, for aunts, my uncles, all that are beyond now…All the pain of our people, the hurt, the anger… (TRC Summary at 15).
The TRC heard more than 6,750 stories. Storytellers included, survivors, their families, and members of their communities and those that wished to narrate and share “their knowledge of the [IRS] system and its legacy” (TRC Summary at 25).
The TRC gathered stories (as well as statements and documents) on IRS through and from:
(The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada: Interim Report (Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, 2015 at 13).
The TRC also gathered documentation relevant to the IRS. It is worthy of note that, in spite of the fact that IRSSA obliged both the Federal government and the Church to give the TRC all relevant documents in their possession, the TRC had to go to court on many occasions to force the two parties to turn in the relevant documents in their possession (TRC Summary at 27-29).
For more than a century, the Canadian government and the Church took away tens of thousands of Indigenous children from their parents, often with the use of force, into the residential schooling program. Below, some of their common experiences are discussed:
The IRS legacy goes far beyond its direct survivors. After experiencing this systematic neglect and trauma, it is no surprise that the children, families and communities of the survivors have also been adversely affected. These people suffer collective and individual trauma directly linkable to the IRS legacy. The TRC describes the legacy as inter-generational: affecting generations after generations. Political and legal policies and mechanisms that surround the IRS continue to work against First Nations’ peoples today. This is exemplified by the glaring disparity between the Indigenous and the non-Indigenous persons in education, income, health, standard of living and other social disparities. In addition, such is also reflected in the racism and “systemic and other forms of discrimination” Indigenous peoples still suffer in Canada today (TRC at 135). Additionally, it is reflected in the “critically endangered status of most Indigenous languages” (TRC at 135).
The TRC’s recommendations are exhortations directed to all Canadian levels of government, asking for action to redress “the legacy of [IRS] and advance the process of reconciliation” in Canada. See Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, “Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada: Calls to Action” (The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, 2015) [Calls to Action] at 1).
There are 94 recommendations (“Calls to Action”) in total. They are arranged in 20 subheadings: child-welfare, education, language and culture, health, justice and equity for Indigenous peoples in the legal system, church apologies and reconciliation, missing children and burial information, National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation, Commemoration and replacement of the Oath of Citizenship to include the observance of treaties with Indigenous peoples as a part of those duties a new citizen will fulfill (Calls to Action; see also Robert Benzie, “Premiers vow to implement Truth and Reconciliation Commission recommendations”, The Toronto Star, July 15, 2015: online: <thestar.com> (Benzie_thestar), and APTN: National News “Read the 94 calls to action here”, APTN News, June 2, 2015: online<aptn.ca>).
The recommendations are primarily directed to the federal Canadian government, because the Indigenous matters are primarily the jurisdiction of the Canadian Parliament (Constitution Act 1867, 30 &31 Victoria, c3 (UK): s 91(24)). However, provincial, territorial and Indigenous governments are also directly called upon to take action concerning the recommendations.
The full list of the TRC’s “Calls to Action” can be accessed here. In addition, lengthier explanations for each recommendation can be accessed in the TRC’s Executive Summary here (see pages 139-337). Below, we have excerpted a sampling of some notable Calls to Action.
Many survivors of the IRS system were shut out from the benefits of the IRSSA, and particularly, from its compensation scheme. This includes students that attended “Day School”; Métis persons, students from schools in Newfoundland and Labrador, and those that attended the government-funded schools that were not clearly identified as residential schools. These people were not only victimized by an IRS-influenced program, they have been denied access to justice through exclusion from the reconciliatory scheme.
The federal government had several other programs that, although falling outside the IRS system, nonetheless inflicted similarly horrific harms. For example, victims of the “Sixties scoop” – the Canada-government-run system that removed babies and children from their parents and families and placing them in foster care within and outside of Canada in the 60s- are not part of the TRC’s mandate or the IRSSA. Thus, the TRC can be described as an incomplete measure, which grants an avenue towards justice to some and completely denies it to others.
Indigenous or native laws do not receive widespread recognition in Canada. Hence, access to justice in accordance with the unique cultures of Indigenous peoples of Canada is still very much lacking. While pockets of Indigenous-informed justice administration exist, and many are staffed and managed by Indigenous peoples, Indigenous-informed justice system is largely absent in the majority of Indigenous settlements in Canada. (For more information, see Heather Chan, 2013 Access to Justice: Aboriginal Peoples of Canada, 2013 ACLRC resources). This adversely impacts reconciliation efforts and is very unhelpful to the broader issues of access to justice for the Indigenous peoples of Canada.
The federal government played a pivotal role in setting up the machinery of the TRC. However, many commentators have observed that it has not done much to help the TRC move forward in fulfilling its mandate, or facilitating the process of reconciliation.
While fulfilling its mandate, the TRC was forced to go to Court on several occasions to get documents it was entitled to from the federal government. Since releasing its report, the federal government has been notably silent concerning any acknowledgement of its findings or pledges to execute its recommendations. This undermines the spirit of reconciliation.
At a TRC forum, the provincial and the territorial government groups unequivocally pledged their support and promised implementation for all the TRC’s recommendations. The federal government did not attend that forum. Benzie_thestar, supra.
Indigenous issues are primarily and exclusively the jurisdiction of the federal government. [Constitution Act, 1867, s 91(24)]. The federal government’s inaction regarding the TRC’s recommendations does a great disservice to reconciliation and the broader issues of access to justice for the Indigenous peoples. This may eventually dampen the enthusiasm being currently shown by the provincial and territorial government groups concerning the implementation of those recommendations and may result in non-execution of them. This does a great disservice not only to the all-parties-Canadian reconciliation, but also to the spirit of access to justice for Canadian Indigenous peoples. It is hoped that the federal government will embrace these recommendations, regain its previous momentum and take its pride of place in championing the cause for reconciliation as well as access to justice for the Indigenous peoples of Canada.
In 2014 the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) published a report on the missing and murdered “Aboriginal females”. The report, among other things, states that:
a) There are 1181 homicides and unresolved missing of Indigenous women (164 missing and 1017 homicide victims);
b) Indigenous women are overrepresented among Canada’s murdered and missing women; and
c) Number of murdered and missing Indigenous women is greater than what was previously in public estimates.
See Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women: A National Operational Overview (Canada, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, 2014).
In spite of what can be described as a nation-wide and popular demand for inquiry into this important Indigenous issue, enthusiasm towards it is lacking on the part of the federal government. The federal government’s view is that this matter is being dealt with appropriately by the police and the court. See Garth Stevenson, “The Strange Case of the Missing Aboriginal Women”, (2015) 37:31 Inroads: A Journal of Opinion, Canadian Periodicals Index Quarterly, Web August, 2015.
To some commentators, the federal government’s lukewarm attitude to the issue of the missing Indigenous women further reinforces the disturbing absence of leadership on the whole Indigenous issues, and does not portend well for Canada’s quest for holistic and lasting reconciliation. Additionally, it further suggests that the TRC’s efforts and its impressive successes concerning reconciliation success concerning access to justice for the Indigenous peoples of Canada are of little consequence, because a burning and important part of the Indigenous issues (e.g. missing Indigenous women) has been neglected.
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