Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc says '215' search for truth continues
CBC
WARNING: This story contains distressing details.
The Tk̓emlúps te Secwépemc say the search for truth and inter-generational healing continues for missing children and survivors at the Kamloops Indian Residential School (KIRS), three years after the announcement of preliminary evidence suggesting around 200 sets of remains were buried on the former school grounds sparked a national movement.
For many, May 27, 2021, is associated with the number 215, the initial number given for the potential buried remains the First Nation said it found. Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc later clarified the preliminary ground-penetrating radar survey had found about 200 potential burial sites on the grounds.
"We remain steadfast in our sacred duty as guardians to the missing children from the Kamloops Indian Residential School," Chief Kúkpi7 Rosanne Casimir said in a statement Monday.
The nation observed May 23, the anniversary of the completion of the initial radar survey, as a day of reflection for Le Estcwicwéy̓, the missing.
And on Monday, Casimir expressed her love to survivors of all residential schools and thanks to the more than 128 communities and 32 nations whose children were required to go to KIRS.
"No words are sufficient to express the comfort and love we wish to convey to you," she said. "We see you, we love you and we believe you."
And to other nations completing their own searches, she said: "We grieve with you and stand with you as you continue with your own investigations."
The findings are being kept confidential to preserve the integrity of the investigation — which is using archival documentation, interviews with survivors, archaeological surveys and forensic analysis, including DNA — but are consistent with the presence of unmarked burials to date, Casimir added.
"The investigation continues to be carried out in compliance with Secwépemc laws, legal traditions, world views, values and protocols," said Casimir.
Casimir says despite elders and survivors of KIRS having spoken about children dying and disappearing for years, the nation's difficult and emotional work has been met with scrutiny and skepticism.
"Men speak of, as boys, attending Kamloops Indian Residential School, being woken in the middle of the night and asked to dig holes that seemed like graves, in the dark, and not being told why," she said.
However Casimir thanked the "allies" who had spoken out against the backlash and rising waves of denialism, stressing that truth "must be upheld."
"There have always been those who target Indigenous people in Canada, with systemic racism and white supremacy as foundational to Canada as the very federal laws that ripped our children away from home, in cattle trucks and police cars, to bring them to the residential schools."