Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper with a kitten |
By Ismail Salami
In June 2008, Canada officially apologized for forcing
150,000 aboriginal children into ghastly residential schools where they were
abused sexually, psychologically and physically.
Residential schools were set up with the assumption that
aboriginal culture failed to adapt to the dominant modern society. They thought
native children could be successful if they assimilated into mainstream
Canadian society by adopting Christianity and speaking either English or
French.
Resident students
were shunned from speaking their mother tongue and if they had, they would have
gone through the worst conceivable form of punishment. Sexual and mental abuse
was the common experience among the indigenous students who were forced to
attend the so-called religious schools by the government. For most of the year,
they were away from their parents. The concept of assimilation was a big lie
and the children eventually left schools with a broken spirit and an amputated
soul.
There are reports and tales of horrendous abuse at the hands
of residential school staff: physical, sexual, emotional, and psychological.
The education they received at schools was infernally inferior: their training
was basically focused on manual labor in agriculture, and light industry.
Instances and forms of abuse at such schools were legion: physical abuse was
tantamount to corporeal punishment; sexual abuse was a common practice and
psychological abuse was what the staff members were good at. Students were
beaten, strapped, and shackled to their beds. Their tongues were pierced with
needles as a punishment for speaking their native language.
This was how the Indian in the aborigines was executed by
the government and how the residential schools had turned into a safe haven for
the colonizing pedophiles. Arthur Plint, a dorm supervisor, who was accused of
18 counts of sexual assaults (children aged 6 to sixteen), was an egregious
instance of this ethical decadence.
Willy Blackwater is a victim of Plint’s inhumanity. He was
the first aboriginal person in Canada to win a medical claim for post-traumatic
stress disorder. A survivor of the Alberni Indian Residential School,
Blackwater speaks of his tormentor at school:
"Arthur Henry Plint was the dorm supervisor for the
younger boys, boys my age. My first week there, he woke me up in the middle of
the night.
He told me to come into his office because there was an
emergency phone call from my father. . . . He had a door from the office right
into his bedroom. He took me there and dropped his robe and faced me, naked. .
. . I started to get sick and tried to puke. He laughed and told me that if I
puked on his bed, I'd get hurt. . . . After that, Plint raped me. . .about once
a month for the next three years. I finally got up my nerve to tell Mr. Butler
what Plint was doing to me. . . Butler gave me a severe strapping and called me
a dirty, lying Indian.”
Known as a sexual terrorist, Plint continued to torment
native children for twenty years. This torment was “condoned by the
authorities, by our society. We talk about equality; we talk about the rights
of society. These young men had no rights; their childhood was stolen from
them.”
Plint is only a microcosm of cultural abuse in Canada.
As the church was seen to be partly responsible for the
sexual maltreatment of the schoolchildren, Pope Benedict XVI expressed his
"sorrow" on April 29, 2009 to a delegation from Canada's Assembly of
First Nations for the abuse and "deplorable" treatment that
aboriginal students had received at Church-run residential schools. The United
Church of Canada formally apologized to Canada's First Nations people in 1986.
"To those individuals who were physically, sexually,
and mentally abused as students of the Indian Residential Schools in which the
United Church of Canada was involved, I offer you our most sincere
apology," the statement by the church's General Council Executive said.
By way of soothing internal and international concerns,
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper also said in an effort to fight back his
crocodile tears, "The government of Canada sincerely apologizes and asks
the forgiveness of the aboriginal peoples of this country for failing them so
profoundly. We are sorry."
These emotional moments of Mr. Harper’s were soon forgotten
and the violation of the rights of the aborigines continued systematically.
The Canadian Feminist Alliance for International Action
(FAFIA) says Canada is ignoring the basic human rights of the poorest and most
vulnerable Canadian women. FAFIA spokesperson Sharon McIvor says, “Canada is
the home of serious violations of the human rights of Aboriginal women and
girls.”
Phenomenally, aboriginal women and young girls have long
started to vanish. So far, more than 600 of them are missing. Many of them have
been reportedly raped, mutilated and murdered. Unfortunately, the Canadian law
enforcement forces have not taken any practical steps to discover the
whereabouts of these female victims or find the culprits.
Besides, the UN’s top human rights official, Navi Pillay, has
included Canada in a list of the world’s worst on human rights, and criticized
Quebec’s Bill 78 for restricting freedom of assembly.
Amnesty International's secretary general Salil Shetty has
scathingly criticized the Canadian government for its serious human rights
violations.
"There is a real shrinking of democratic spaces in this
country... Many organizations have lost their funding for raising inconvenient
questions," AFP quoted Shetty as saying.
Canada is a land of broken promises; a country where the
first dwellers are so agonizingly deprived of their basic rights; a country
where the dignity of man is brazenly cast to dust.
A country, which so barefacedly pontificates about human
rights violations elsewhere disregards respect for human rights and is for its
part dismally landed in a morass of abysmal hypocrisy.
No comments:
Post a Comment