Ottawa launches residential school map to help in search for missing children

The Canadian government has launched a new interactive online map pinpointing the location of residential schools, and experts say it will help in the search for unmarked or forgotten graves of children forced to go to the institutions.

Many residential school buildings have been torn down, paved or built over since the first one opened in Canada in the 1830s and the last one closed in the mid-1990s.

The Indian Residential Schools Interactive Map will help searchers get accurate locations of former buildings.

"It's a very valuable resource," said Andrew Martindale, an anthropology professor at the University of British Columbia (UBC).

"If we find evidence of a cemetery or a burial, and we know where it is relative to buildings in the 1930s, we can use this kind of information to say: 'Where is this today?'"

ottawa launches residential school map to help in search for missing children

The new Indian Residential Schools Interactive Map contains historical aerial photos, giving users a glimpse of what the institutions used to look like. (Indian Residential Schools Interactive Map)

Martindale said it's challenging to get information from jurisdictions about the history of former residential school land, including how it changed and the names of the the landowners.

"If we're off by even a metre, it can have consequences in the work that we do," said Martindale, a member of the National Advisory Committee on Residential Schools Missing Children and Unmarked Graves.

The free mapping tool includes contemporary and historical aerial photos, giving users an opportunity to visualize where the institutions operated and what they looked like.

A window into the past

More than 100 Indigenous communities are involved in residential schools grave searches, and they had to pay to access aerial maps from libraries and obtain records through access-to-information requests with government institutions, said Kimberly Murray, independent special interlocutor for missing children in unmarked burials.

While the tool may come too late to help ongoing community searches, Murray said every new bit of data helps while looking for lost children.

"The more information that is out there for communities, the better," said Murray. "But I do think that Canada hasn't gone far enough in what it's made available."

ottawa launches residential school map to help in search for missing children

'The more information that is out there for communities, the better,' says Kimberly Murray, the independent special interlocutor for missing children and unmarked graves and burial sites associated with residential schools, about Ottawa's new map tool. (Stephen Jaison Empson/CBC)

Approximately 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Métis were removed from their families during the time residential schools operated. Ottawa had used the Indian Act to force children to attend the government-funded to be indoctrinated into Euro-Christian Canadian society.

Many children were subjected to physical, psychological and sexual abuse.

The interactive map excludes many institutions that subjected Indigenous children to the same harms as residential schools.

The tool doesn't list Indian hospitals, tuberculosis sanatoriums, day schools or boarding schools not funded by the federal government.

These institutions weren't included in the $1.9-billion Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement, which required the government to compile and turn over records to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission documenting the history of the institutions.

New tool could help counter residential school denialism

Tricia Logan, interim academic director at the Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre at the University of British Columbia, said she hopes the map gets updated with all institutions that were used to assimilate Indigenous children.

"Anything that's made more available  … a little bit more transparent is always so helpful and supportive to Nations and communities that are doing that research right now," said Logan, who's also an assistant professor in First Nations and Indigenous Studies at UBC.

The map doesn't include any information about residential schools in Newfoundland and Labrador. In 2017, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau apologized to residential school survivors in that province following a $50-million settlement agreement after they were left out because the federal government did not run boarding schools in their province.

Another notable absence from the list is the former boarding school in Île-à-la-Crosse, Sask., which continues to be a source of disagreement between the federal and Saskatchewan governments over who shoulders responsibility.

ottawa launches residential school map to help in search for missing children

The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation has documented more than 4,000 children who died in the institutions, but the true figure is estimated to be much higher. (Canadian Press/Sean Kilpatrick)

Despite the missing information, Logan said the data the government has made available could help counter misinformation and disinformation about residential schools, known as denialism.

"Maps like that provided by government sources … helps to kind of confront those claims of very often very malicious misinformation or disinformation that arises," Logan said.

CBC News asked for an interview with Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu, but she was not available.

In a news release, Hajdu said the map will empower survivors and communities.

"People in Canada for too long have had the truth of colonialism hidden from them, harming us all, and delaying the healing that is essential to our country's health and prosperity," Hajdu said.

A national Indian Residential School Crisis Line is available to provide support for survivors and those affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by calling the 24-hour service at 1-866-925-4419.

Mental health counselling and crisis support is also available 24 hours a day, seven days a week through the Hope for Wellness hotline at 1-855-242-3310 or by online chat.

OTHER NEWS

17 minutes ago

Indigenous ritual practiced for 12,000 years, study shows

17 minutes ago

Clicks announces plan to offload ‘medicine factory’ Unicorn

17 minutes ago

Airbus says to get $559 million compensation under Spirit Aero deal

18 minutes ago

England fans celebrate Euro win

18 minutes ago

Debris Flows After Wildfires in New Mexico Threaten Towns

18 minutes ago

Brian Windhorst says the Nuggets are in a tough spot after losing KCP: "How do the Nuggets keep up?"

18 minutes ago

Watch SZA & Simone Biles Have a Handstand Contest in Olympics Promo Clip

18 minutes ago

Inspectors warn abandoned Australian Antarctic base poses 'clear risk'

18 minutes ago

Chris Paul Hurts 3-Time All-Star's Odds To Join San Antonio Spurs

18 minutes ago

2024 NBA Free Agency Tracker: Live Updates, All Confirmed Signings, Trades, And Extensions

18 minutes ago

HGTV's Breegan Jane Says To Ditch Modern Cabinet Trends For This Classic Alternative

18 minutes ago

Boston Celtics' majority owner Wyc Grousbeck selling stake in team

18 minutes ago

BREAKING: Four-Time Champion Klay Thompson Agrees to Sign with Mavs; Joins Luka Doncic, Kyrie Irving

18 minutes ago

Shocking discovery provides evidence of ancient women going into battle alongside men - and being injured

18 minutes ago

Queen Mary and King Frederik X of Denmark smile and pose for selfies - as they receive gifts at village visit during Greenland trip

18 minutes ago

‘Wicked’ Shifts Earlier In November, Dates Against ‘Gladiator II’: Is Another ‘Barbenheimer’ Box Office Weekend In Store?

18 minutes ago

Timeline for easing Calgary’s water restrictions to be revealed Tuesday

18 minutes ago

TEA investigating allegations Fort Bend ISD incentivized students, staff to vote in 2023 election

18 minutes ago

KHOU 11 Chief Meteorologist David Paul on what to make of Hurricane Beryl

23 minutes ago

Cristiano Ronaldo breaks down in TEARS after his extra-time penalty was SAVED by Slovenia keeper Jan Oblak as his nightmare Euro 2024 campaign continues

23 minutes ago

Democrats’ best hope now, anti-semites excommunicated me and other commentary

24 minutes ago

UN group demands release of ex-Pakistan PM Imran Khan; says his detention violates international law

24 minutes ago

NHL reinstates Bowman, MacIsaac, Quenneville after ban for role in Blackhawks scandal

24 minutes ago

Sonay Kartal lives her proudest day after earning first Wimbledon win

24 minutes ago

Bride praised for replacing maid of honor after she refused to buy dress

24 minutes ago

Japan's Kamada moves to Palace on free transfer from Lazio

24 minutes ago

Cops probe whether bus veered into oncoming traffic moments before deadly Bruce Hwy collision

24 minutes ago

Famous Actress' $4 Million LA Home Recently Hit the Market and People Aren't Impressed

24 minutes ago

Ford Says Its Affordable EV Will Cost $30,0000 and Compete Directly With Tesla and BYD

24 minutes ago

Bank of America data shows today marks beginning of the S&P 500’s ‘strongest’ average 10-day period of the year…over 96 years

24 minutes ago

Bitcoin will have 'pretty sharp rebound' in the second half of the year, says Fundstrat's Tom Lee

24 minutes ago

Why are women retiring at 54? It’s not because we’re sick

24 minutes ago

Corporations need to make moral and economic decisions in ideological positioning, says Americus Reed

24 minutes ago

Grenada Is One of My Favorite Caribbean Islands — and It Just Got an Incredible New Resort

24 minutes ago

How Keir Starmer's past shows what he would be like as Prime Minister

24 minutes ago

Michelle Keegan's organising gurus share top handbag essentials for summer days out

28 minutes ago

Walgreens closing huge wave of major stores US - full list here

28 minutes ago

Of the 117 noise cancelling headphones we tested, these are the 5 best

28 minutes ago

Carrefour sees more upside from Cora and Match acquisition

28 minutes ago

Gladiator 2 first look sees Paul Mescal and Pedro Pascal lock swords, with an unrecognizable Joseph Quinn as a sadistic emperor