Thank you to @arsenalpulp and @zgstories for a copy of Tsqelmucwilc: The Kamloops Indian Residential School - Resistance and Reckoning. This eye-opening look at one of the many residential schools demonstrates the strength of spirit of Indigenous peoples.
Using personal accounts, Tsqelmucwilc, shares with the reader the day to day experiences and the history of the Kamloops Indian Residential School. This is an expanded version of a 1988 release by the principal author, Celia Haig-Brown. The 2022 version includes forewords by indigenous individuals, information about the 2021 speeches to the current Prime Minister and a circling back to family members and original survivors of the school.
The author, a white woman, has received support from the Tk’emlúps te Secwe̓pemc (Kamloops) Chief and council and has been a secondary school teacher in the area at two high schools, has been involved in the rodeo community to which many indigenous people of the area are involved, and was a coordinator for the Indigenous Teacher Education Program.
Beginning with the Indian Act of 1876, the government wanted to wean ‘Indians’ from their “habits and feelings of their ancestors, and the acquirements of the language, arts and customs of civilized life.”
“The Oblates soon recognized the advantages of working with children in isolation from the influence of their parents and the importance of daily religious participation in moulding young minds.”
The authors have informed us about how the school was run with its minimal educational component, strict religious basis, food insecurity and agrarian training.
The title of this book means ‘we return to being human’ and a significant portion of the book discusses the resistance by indigenous students at the Kamloops Indian Residential School.
Mentions are made of the sexual abuse by the school superiors and priests but many of the survivors found it too traumatizing to discuss openly. While some students graduated and others were sent home due to illness or because a family called them back, all too many died of disease, lack of proper food and supervision, suicide, and factors arising from the trauma including alcoholism. The 215 bodies discovered on the property tell the story of the horrors of the Indian Residential School system. Children, grandchildren and future family members of those who attended the schools will need support to heal and to revitalize the Secwépemc language and customs.