I thought I should take the responsibility to post this and remind everyone about what today is.

National Day For Truth And Reconciliation

Both my parents are survivors of the residential school era and my family have had to live with this horror all our lives … whether we knew it or not.

For me the day is not to shame anyone or lay blame on those around me.

But rather to let everyone know about this history and never allow anything like it to ever happen again.

  • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    Now that the day is past, today I saw in the news what each candidate was doing yesterday. What’s the story behind Á’a:líya Warbus being a Conservative candidate in Chilliwack?

    I’m not surprised to occasionally see LGBTQ+ folks joining hands with conservatives because there’s one thing that usually threads the needle there: class warfare. I can also understand the poor working class that votes conservative: rugged individualism and “traditional values”. But I still can’t understand indigenous voters going conservative… Rustad is clearly an enemy!? 🤷‍♂️

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.caOP
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      50 minutes ago

      That’s the thing about native politics … we are just as susceptible to propaganda, media spin and outright lies as much as anyone else.

      I know plenty of Native people in my circle of family and friends who all banter around the mantra ‘Fuck Trudeau’ and say how much they hate Trudeau but can’t really point to any specific reason why other than to repeat whatever stupidity they read on social media.

      Not everyone is politically literate, educated or even moderately informed about most things that happen in the world … it’s a normal part of society in the world … and it’s the same with Native people.

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.caOP
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      56 minutes ago

      Very funny … I felt like I just got shot by a Grunt with a plasma pistol

      A Unggoy Grunt that is a bottom feeder of the Covenant and Banished forces that is short, slow, and completely useless on their own.

  • _____@lemm.ee
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    18 hours ago

    There’s so much alt right propaganda today against truth and reconciliation.

    It actually sickens me to think that people wake up and seek to denounce historical atrocities (and far to many to list against the first nations).

    • ZC3rr0r@lemmy.ca
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      2 hours ago

      For a nation so thoroughly comprised of migrants as Canada, I can’t understand the conservative tendencies to rail against both the people that were already here and the new migrants coming in. This is about the clearest “fuck you, got mine” attitude I’ve seen beside prejudice against the homeless (practiced by the same group of people).

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.caOP
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      16 hours ago

      It’s a lot more heartbreaking, heartaching and completely dumbfounding when you’ve grown up with all the stories and first hand accounts of people in your own family about this stuff and then meet someone who does not want to believe it.

      I won’t say where I’m from or where my parents went to residential school … we’re from northern Ontario and my family tree stretches from Chapleau all the way up to Hudson Bay. We’re a mix of Ojibway / Cree and OjiCree … we live in that part of the country where two distantly related language groups meet each other. We’re neither fully Cree or fully Ojibway, we’re in between, which confuses many people.

      Mom went to a school in the southern part of our territory and she had a few bad things happen to her but she more or less had good experiences, people took care of her and she had a decent education. Dad on the other hand was completely traumatized, literally tortured, basically kidnapped at the age of eight … we have family genealogists and researchers who found documents listening his name and year he was picked up which made him eight years of age, along with four others who would have been seven and eight at the time.

      My parents often told us about where they went to school when we were growing … but they never talked about the terrible things that happened to them. They did mention that people were mean and unkind to them … but we just assumed that they were like the mean and stern teachers we all saw at school. It wasn’t until I was a teenager that I started hearing stories of what happened. I never got the stories from my parents, I heard them from other survivors … it’s weird, each survivor never wanted to talk about what happened to them, but they were able to talk about what happened to others around them. My uncles told me what happened to dad years later through bits and pieces and fragments of stories they shared over many years. One of my dad’s older brothers was taken in when he was older at about the age of 12 or 14 and he was a bull headed and strong individual who was known to literally start fist fighting with priests, nuns and school people. They kept him only for a couple of years and he was not forced to return. He was the one who told me that dad was one of the weaker kids and that he couldn’t protect him or his other younger brothers.

      Dad had one brother who was a year older that he stuck with during those years.

      There’s one sad story I learned from all that. At one point, this older brother watched out for dad during their first years together. They were constantly together to the point where the older brother would do things like tie his younger brother’s shoes and help him dress in the morning. That little bit of help and caring was frowned upon and the older brother was constantly beaten and punished for showing any affection.

      After the first few years, the brothers drifted apart and they helped each other less and less and the more they spent time away from one another, the worse their experiences became.

      No one ever came out with detailed stories of what happened to dad … all they know is that it was bad. Dad never mentioned any of it until he was in the last ten years of his life. He saw the payouts that were happening and he said at the time that he would share some stories just so his kids and grandkids could have the money. He didn’t care about any kind of reconciliation because the damage had been done and that he would never heal from any of it. I helped him write out some of those documents and recounted some tame stories of being beaten, being tortured and being absolutely terrified at supposed monsters and demons he saw as child … I can only imagine that the demons and monsters he saw were just childhood memories of something truly terrible that happened to him.

      God I hate this day because it makes me think about and talk about these things.

      I am happy that this day exists to remind everyone of what it is and what happened.

      But at the same time, it fills me with anger, hidden rage and anxiety knowing what happened to my parents and that in many circles it is still debated and discussed by those who have no connection at any to these things.

      I’m happy we’re here talking about it and that I can share at least this much of my story with you … it alleviates some of the burden knowing that I told someone else and it makes it that much better for me knowing that it is being heard by someone who cares.

      Chi-Meegwetch, thanks very much.

  • phanto@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I want to give you the internet equivalent of a firm handshake. This needed to be said, thank you for being the one to say it.

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.caOP
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      1 day ago

      I return the hand shake my friend.

      Chimeegwetch doodem … it means “thanks very much my friend.”

      I wish more non native people would take the initiative instead and acknowledge commemorations like this. It normalizes things like this and makes it more significant for us native people … it makes us realize that more of non native Canada is open to acknowledging events like this, and by extension becoming more open and accepting of indigenous people and our culture … not that Canada doesn’t already, it just makes it more so.

      • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        I wish more non native people would take the initiative instead and acknowledge commemorations like this. It normalizes things like this and makes it more significant for us native people

        Something I’d like to see is the addition of regional FN languages to the school curriculum for each province. I’m a languages nerd so I’m biased, but I think that would help (not to mention also help preserve the language of those particular nations)

  • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    As a non-FN person, I never really know what to do on this day. Remembrance Day for example has the usual ceremonies around 11am.

    • LeFantome@programming.dev
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      19 hours ago

      It is Truth and Reconciliation:

      Truth - the past happened and we don’t deny it

      Reconciliation - coming together as friends

      Sounds like you have done the Truth part. Just start reconciling. Perhaps collaboratively work towards a better future if the opportunity presents itself. At the very least, show that you are up for it.

      Note I did not say guilt or compensation. You can do that if you want but it is not a requirement.

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.caOP
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      1 day ago

      The fact you acknowledge the day and think about this history is enough.

      Remember this history, share it on this day with others around you. It’s not a celebration, or even a ceremony, it’s a commemoration.

      Remembering also shouldn’t be all negative, it’s an affirmation that you stand and support those who suffered in the past and are suffering now and wish that it will never happen again to any group of people any where.

    • Doubleohdonut@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      I’m not FN but I’m wearing my tshirt so I can show solidarity that this was an atrocity that should never happen again. I’m definitely open to other suggestions though! I wish there was a live celebration somewhere that you could watch.