tv [untitled] November 25, 2021 1:30am-2:00am AST
1:30 am
200 meters collides with our planets. it could have devastating consequences. scientists hope the small impact will be a huge step forward to protecting a potentially devastating impact on earth. lore about a manly al jazeera ah . another top stories on al jazeera, at least 31 people have died after their small boat sank while trying to cross the english channel from france. several robert being a set of from cali on wednesday in the hopes of reaching the you case, southern shores. local officials say this could be the most deadly incident involving migrants and refugees attempting the crossing. french authorities say more bodies are likely to be at sea. this disaster underscores how dangerous it is to cross the channel in this way. and it also shows how vital it is
1:31 am
that we now step up our efforts to break the business model of the gangsters who are sending people to see or in this way. i say to our partners are across the channel. now is the time for us to step up to work together to do everything a we can to break these gangs who are literally getting away with murder. 3 white men have been found guilty of murdering our mode. our bri, who was chased down and shot dead in a georgia neighborhood last year. greg mc, michael was found guilty on all charges including malice, murder, his father, travis, was found guilty of felony murder. and the 3rd man who joined the chase and filmed the killing william bryan, was also found guilty of felony murder. they pursued the 25 year old black man was out jogging with their truck. a deadly new wave of corona virus cases continues to sweep through europe. several countries are seeing record, high case counts,
1:32 am
and the e. u has made a u turn to recommend booster shots. the head of the public health agency now says 3rd, jobs should be considered for all adults daily covered related deaths across the e u r. now at an average of more than 4000, if you have been prime minister i be, i'm ed says that he's heading to the front line to lead his troops as fighting between the government and rebels. escalades rebels from t gr i have pushed into the camera and are far at regions and down a major road running to the capitol. i this up of those are the top stories. stay with us. fault lines is next my colleagues in the oval of menus and half an hour. i'll see you tomorrow of i talk to alger. see ruth rios, how would you describe telephones relationship with the u. s. we listen copied. one kid who's not over covered 19 has been terrible demonstration of the failure of human. so we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on
1:33 am
how to sierra whole. ooh, what if wendy? someone just came here to the house and just took it away. and you never saw your parents. and i never told you why, or she was only 9, and my granddaughters will be shape soon. so thinking back who toggles our mind that this happened, and what had to go through a different group of canada, cisco is 751 unlocked dreams of the site of
1:34 am
a former residential school. indigenous is a cooling, it's a crime against humanity. a 2nd such discovery in less than a month. the indigenous people from canada, they always knew it was there. they said you need to look to our neighbors to the south of us in the us. who things like that happened here. got a modern brussel decide. oh fleet state barry hopefully not brought out. ne, open that we've had those kinds of atrocity separate us here in the united states. i've talked to elders who tell me that all the children in the village had to leave . and there was an ear required in the village. there was no sound of children. the headmaster wept my bear back with the rubber hose. i couldn't breathe, couldn't catch my breath. i passed out
1:35 am
a little boy said they had to hold me up for one more whip i stood it to be heard this finance knew united history has to be told me or oh. ringback ringback ringback i very keep a most student. ringback who speaks raised her mother's friendly manner? wondering parents, a little jimmy and blocking the rain. when we 1st heard about the children, married and kamloops, canada, that brought back
1:36 am
a flood of memories for myself and many and my generation of our own experiences in morning was just kind of writing under the surface of our consciousness. here's my dad, my mom and me when i was a baby. when my dad passed away, we became of interest to the bureau of indian affairs and it wasn't very long before the social workers. and for my 1st my mom to make a decision, give your children up for adoption or send them to boarding school. she chose to send us to body shop with the idea that at least we will be together in the summertime when school was out on our way to the airport. our mother
1:37 am
made this big apology saying that she, sorry, we're gonna have to have you go to boarding school. this was in the fall of 1955. we were taken to the town of wrangell into this huge kind of government and closed on claim county rose out of the mountains and trees. as wrangell institute we were not quite sure what was going to be in our future. oh ah ah ah ah, the government said that it must be coming too expensive to continue killing
1:38 am
indians. but educate them, let's assimilate them. he was a rabbit assimilationist. so it was, let's kill the indian them. man said the man. the whole basis for his boy schools was to get them as far away from the culture as he could forced assimilation and force christianity the work ethic. now complete military style format. ah, no one had ever asked the federal government to me, boys will say rang no one ever asked the churches, how many bodies will they ran? so i decided to dedicate as much time as i could to research how many boys schools, when the united states, just recently i've come up with 406 at
1:39 am
the school. the 1st place we went to in the moist arm reside a large open area. i concrete floor and there we were ordered to get completely undressed. many of us did not know each other. and here we are were standing in bas receiving room and some children who did not understand the commands to get undressed. ringback some matrons were frustrated enough, they ran over to that little guy and just literally car his shirt are off his body . an ar chablis on pulled up his pants. curse the child was in tears was frightened. there was a lot of eerie silence among the other kids who were watching miss
1:40 am
the little things that we had brought with hesper were basically confiscated and we'd never seen them again. and that we were ordered to get in line. each kid was assigned a 2 digit number and that 2 digit number was written in with indelible ink on our clothing. i. here's one from 1960. my number was 68 at it was very dehumanizing and to the, to the extent that some matrons were found them only referring to aspire number. we were handed government mission clothing. and then we were marcia to our dorm rooms, which is basically a military style barracks. we got settled in for the night. that's sometimes hard to cry. it started off with little whim parish,
1:41 am
a little simples, but it caught on all it took was for one little child start crying and then another one and then another. and then another to a point where the entire door room of little kids are just wailing into the night. and we all cried ourselves to sleep. waking up the next day, our eyes are swollen, shut in, the process was repeated over and over and over until the middle of the school year . i don't think any child cried any more because no one's gonna come and get me or hold me. tell them. but they're loved, the buildings were cold, they were under heated. the kids were hungry and they were half what to death. the
1:42 am
discipline was, was horrific. a kids were killed. they got killed working in the barn. i work in the fields. they were overcrowded. so they died if t b missiles, they died of typhoid pneumonia and the flu had a reporter asked me, i say, well, the history of boy school was written on the books and i said it was never written in. it's not in any history books for more than a century, the interior department was responsible for operating the indian boarding schools across the united states and its territories. at no time in history, have the records or documentation of this policy been compiled or analyzed to
1:43 am
determine the full scope of its reaches and effects. we must uncover the truth about the loss of human life and the lasting consequences of the schools. when they started reporting on the missing children in canada, it brought back memories of carlisle, pennsylvania, in the school there. this is my grandmother. my grandmother's oldest sister, was mary kenneth sometime in the sixty's. grandma said to mom, sister mary went to school and she's buried there. when you hear words like that, you don't know to ask other questions because you're shocked by the words that you just heard. we all grew up with quicken me,
1:44 am
mom. always wonder what that mean. so in the late sixty's she started doing some searching for what happened to mary. she had this photo captioned william, karen, oak and daughter taker on 19 o. 3. and we both discussed. could this be barry? it's hard to know. does she look like a 9 year old girl? she'll pick a little girl. but they took mary in 30 others children from southeast alaska and in 19 o 3 they went from a temperate rain forest where there's lots of trees to a country that's flat and has trees but not like home. so it had to have been so much they had to adjust to to hunt, ask a little children it to last as for adults,
1:45 am
songs a days to figure out what's going on. once they got to carlo, pennsylvania, it was an immediate transformation into becoming westernized out ingles to govern carlo indian students and our patrons. pupils are placed in families to learn english in the customs of civilized life outings under the guise of teaching people huddle. do housework, how to learn how western culture works in the household, but it was kind of like free labor. here was the 1st evidence that mary had gone to a nodding. mom was trying to find any information because she knew she died at
1:46 am
carlyle. stay of alaska department of health and welfare of 1967. 1985. it took a long time. this was over several years that she was writing back and forth trying to figure out who has what information 9093. june 2008. 0, very cute. she finally found those 2 pieces of paper that said she had been there and she got sick and died. confined to bed in hospital for the past 2 weeks. irregular temperature with disinformation. my cousin said, found the medicine doctor. when he read that, he said she must have had t b just by that little bit of the scripts. and
1:47 am
when i 1st went to carlo and went through all the names on the stones, i was overwhelmed with so many children. there was no, mary 14 graves had markers unknown in the school cemetery. we figured she must be one of the unknowns. they moved to the cemetery to where it is to day in the records were not good. they can't keep track of children. that's where i got my 1st anger about the people not knowing what we've gone through.
1:48 am
jordan and gordon school time. they did start that cemetery over there. there's a lot of old graves there. lot of kids died from disease. i was going to born school here. meningitis, pneumonia, flu. this used to be dormitory at one time when it was born school. the little boy and a half years my dad eugene senior, he went to school here as a more school student. he had bad experiences. it was catholic school in there were suppressed, he was suppressed in speaking his language. he said, dearest, i am said he was punished for being caught speaking language and they get disciplined. he was traumatized by that may impact on
1:49 am
from warden schools with language loss, even cultural loss. id been here, elders one time, the kids at one to carlisle or one off to a different gordon school that they come back in years like they were incense, they were changed like they didn't want to speak their language. like they didn't want to do their cultural ways, overwhelming. being the l. matrons like down as far as to make sure that no child spoke to their language. they had a thing called the gotten it, and a child in your rack up some merits. i sometimes those mirrors were speaking your language and during that gotten that children who had these to merits were 1st to become completely undressed and walk and run naked down
1:50 am
a line of children who are on both sides of them using their belts against their fellow student and sometimes i, some kids used the, the buckle, and some of these kids i hit pretty hard because if they didn't, they would have to go through the got met. besides their physical punishment. there was psychological abuse. then of course, sexual abuse ah wrangle seemed to attract peter files and out loud boys and the boys on were sexually molested. here when i was about 10 years, all i had written home and i was writing about some the abuses, ice, a saw and experience. and my mom didn't do anything with when i rode her bow side,
1:51 am
he thought she didn't care. but what i learned when i was much older and she happened to remember was she said when i got your letter, there is large parts of your letter that was blacked out. i, yesterday, we call that being redacted. so a lot of the things i talked about my mom could never have known about because i was just blackout this when i was at wrangell, i think i was 13 at the end of the 10 years than i was in boarding for i knew everything about the world, but i didn't know who i was what
1:52 am
happened in voiding schools as a cultural genocide and after finding my dad's back as i just felt down and just sobbed and sad. to think in this 9 year old boy backed away from everything he knew, aid you said it as a professor that i wanted to do a qualitative interview study of financial survivors. how there were themes that came out. number one of course was the loss of identity, loss of language, loss of culture, loss of ceremony as traditions self esteem. there was extreme loneliness. there was loss of their parents and a sense of abandonment. then there was abuse. there was corporal punishment forced to child labor. they were hungry, malnourished, and there was sexual and mental abuse. there was out and resolved grief that inter generational trauma,
1:53 am
his son has been handed down to to even those that didn't go to boarding school. ah ah ah, just go for exercise over introducing yourself, but don't say no, not a lot of money. without the language, she won't have a culture. my dad mother talked about how the were raised and award and school, especially language. they said we're gonna teach her children english. we're not going to speak our language to them because we don't want our kids to go through the same teacher. we did this inter generational trauma. oh,
1:54 am
it does something to you appear. it seems like carries all men to the next generation at all, sir. are florence speakers are really low and not? i've been working in earnest, trying to find ways of trying to work ways to get this language out to her kids. and i don't know. ah no, but who taught me was my mother and my grandma, my dad's mother that she talked to us in or apple on my dad wasn't there. what we're saying there are not saw this. oh my people look at your flag. it has been raised. it is raised and fly in the wind. oh, this flag song. i used always sing that song when i was
1:55 am
a little kid. and my mother was in the kitchen. she heard me. then she said, don't wanna teach you the proper words. so she did a, i always kept that song in my head. she told me the meanest of the words la. hey, near dawn there. why? jenna? that was a rap po, nation flag song. all hey, the up go. they how long sometimes i tell. okay. you guys are gonna grow up, are you going to start families to keep us language unless culture life is being wrapped long after me by he in a song obey him, pride are not forget, tried to remember me. the sorry language that keeps your epo blood
1:56 am
going, keeping the light at novice at knob with ah, i asked now what are we being shield from? what has been the problems? it just curious on from generation to generation, from the traders, the disruption in our language, in our culture. i don't speak either languish because my parents both believed that we would never progress in the western culture unless we spoke english march now for a family life. so that's why she would go out and try to put the picture together to say, who are we? why are we scattered? why do i not know this part of my family? we're helping her.
1:57 am
ah ah. so paul williams and martha never returned. no, it's a big hole in your family, but that was the goal of the school and the churches was to cut family ties. and as of all work, hard to have was a close knit family. i think for mom, at the beginning of our, the healing of our family was to find out where our relatives are, who's very important to her.
1:58 am
it's important for me to finish mom's journey to have mary so far away. as i know, we need to bring the family home. mom was trying to find all the gods, put it all together, make the story complete, is to bring her home. this is part of our hurt that we need to figure out how to start healing that hurt. oh, the coated 19 pandemic has led to a spike in child trafficking across india,
1:59 am
$1.00 to $1.00 east meets those fighting to save hon children on al jazeera in december. just eve katara, host, the fever, arab cut, a momentous event for the region and a glimpse of what's in store for the 2022 wildcat. people in power invest the gates, the use and abuse of power across the globe. a world exclusive interview with joint nobel peace, lori if recognize the safeguarding freedom of expression as a precondition for democracy and lasting peace from shore. documentaries, too. in depth explain this portal showcase is the best to voucher zeroes. digital content as the year rolls to a close, we look back at the events that have shaped the news and look ahead to next year. december on a jesse europe. ah
2:00 am
31 people trying to reach britain have drowned in the english channel in the worst recorded migration disaster on the crossing from france. ah, hello, i'm hasn't seeka, this is alice. i live from the house are coming up. all 3 man he charged in a death of a black man shot while jogging through their neighbourhood in georgia, convicted of his murder, safely slammed the son of former libyan leader. momma got daffy's candidacy for president. it is rejected.
18 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1023250560)