Lesson 1: The Impact of Assimilation: Residential Schools and Intergenerational Trauma Flashcards
The Davin Report
(2)
(1) Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald commissioned Nicholas Flood Davin (a conservative MP from Regina) to investigate the industrial schools established for Indigenous peoples in the United States and to write a report on what Macdonald saw as a problem—“Indians.
(2) Davin Report, was officially entitled Report on Industrial Schools for Indians and Half-Breeds
The Davin report’s solution
(3)
(1) was to focus on training Indigenous children in boarding schools; as it stated, children were to be taken away “from the influence of the wigwam.
(2) declared that not much could be done in terms of “civilizing” Indigenous adults
(3) Indigenous children, however, could be schooled and trained to become like non-Indians
Where was the first residential school for “Indians” in the United States
Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania
The architect of the American residential school system
Richard Henry Pratt, an officer in the United States Army
When were Residential schools in operation in Canada?
Residential schools were in operation in Canada from 1831 until the close of the final federally run school in 1996
The first residential school in Canada
the Mohawk Institute, which began operating as a boarding school for boys from Six Nations in 1831 in Brantford, Ontario
How many generations of children attended these schools?
7
In 1920, the federal government made it mandatory for all Indigenous children between the ages of 7 and 15 to attend school
although this new amendment to the Indian Act did not mean compulsory attendance at residential schools—because more First Nations children attended day schools than residential schools until the 1944–45 school year, when the pattern was reversed—it did mean that authorities could compel attendance at residential schools when there were no other educational options
What happened to Parents who refused to send their children to school?
were threatened with fines or imprisonment.
The alleged function of these schools was to provide education to Indigenous children. Other functions and purposes have been now revealed.
(4)
(1) All of the schools mandated the learning and adoption of the Christian religion.
(2) Many Indigenous pupils were falsely taught that their culture was the way of the devil.
(3) Some were threatened with going to hell if they continued to practice their traditional culture.
(4) English and French language was also forced upon children, and speaking in one’s traditional language was forbidden.
Immediately upon attending the schools
(3)
(1) children would be assigned a number and their traditional names would be replaced by English or French names.
(2) Traditional long hair or braids would be cut short or shaved off.
(3) Traditional clothing was confiscated and replaced by standard issued uniforms. Sacred regalia and objects were burned.
Historian Ian Mosby documents the most ambitious and well known of these nutritional experiments
James Bay survey of peoples from the Attawapiskat and Rupert’s House Cree First Nations conducted from 1947 to 1948
genocide
(2)
(1) is the systematic and deliberate annihilation and elimination of a racial, political, or cultural group
(2) to commit an act of genocide does not require direct killing; rather, it is about the destruction and eradication of a people.
Coined the term “genocide” during discussions leading up to the United Nations Genocide Convention
Raphael Lemkin
the first Indigenous person in Canada to sue and win a case against the federal government for post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from residential school abuses
Willy Blackwater
On May 10, 2006, in a landmark event, this agreement was finally approved
The Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (IRSSA)