tv Canadas Dark Secret Al Jazeera March 2, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am AST
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day it's central park in new york city. you never have guessed it was right smack in the middle of winter. look around, people are dressed like it's spring or summer. wait, hold on. where is the snow ever seen new york in february like this? never a new reality, perhaps with new yorkers, 1st enjoying the warm weather, but now beginning to ask themselves, will it ever snow this year? because this isn't normal, but probably don't even need to be wearing this jacket right now, because it's mid february and it's supposed to be cold. but it's not. ah, hello and lauren taylor, in under the top stories on al jazeera, a gathering of foreign ministers from the g 20 group of nations and india, as ended without an agreement on how to end the war and ukraine. you're
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a sector of state antony lincoln says russia has shown no interest in engaging on peace in ukraine follows the 1st face to face conversation between blinkin and his russian count. but sag elaborate since the start of the war. i told the foreign minister of what i and so many others said last week at the united nations. and what so many g, 20 foreign minister said today, and this war of aggression engage in meaningful diplomacy that can produce a just and durable piece. presence. lensky is put forward a 10 point plan for adjusting durable pieces. the united states stand ready to support ukraine through diplomacy, to end the war on this basis. president putin, however, has demonstrated 0 interest and engaging, saying there's nothing to even talk about unless and until ukraine accepts, and i quote the new territory realities while doubling down on his brutalization of ukraine. when the government will bleach the go, a dealers, when you cook the,
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we publicly said more than once that will never refuse serious proposals based on a sincere desire to find a political solution. i'll remind you once again that while we're being called for talks, i don't remember any of our western colleagues from any of the number of other countries urging ukraine for talks. probably there's truth in this because ukraine is being encouraged to continue the was ukraine is blaming russia for a strike on a residential block in their southern city of separation that killed at least 4 people. several others were injured. the attack destroyed many apartments in the 5 story building and emergency services. they rex say they rescued 11 people from the rubble. russian president vladimir putin says a ukrainian sabotage group, shot civilians on russian territory close to the border. a governor, the brianna screen says the group crossed from ukraine and opened fire on a car,
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killing 2 people and injuring a child, who to call the incident a terrorist attack. a crane denies the allegation, saying it is a classic and deliberate provocation was a shirt or the russian soldiers are protecting people from neo nazis and terrorists . like you've got from those who tortured and killed people in the don bath for 8 years. those who killed darya beginner in moscow. those who today committed another terrorist act, they infiltrated the border and open fire and civilians do you they saw it was a civilian car, a saw there was civilians and children sitting there. you really open file on them . a tube members nuclear station marceau on duty during tuesdays train crash in greece, the worst in the nation's history, as appeared in court facing charges, including negligent homicide. emergency crews are still combing through the wreckage a head on collision in northern greece. left at least 57 people dead. john syrup ross has more from the hospital where many of the dead and injured have been taken . it was just earlier inside the hospital building and the emphasis her. we're
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about 2 dozen relatives were being briefed by the deputy health minister who's here on the process of dna, identification of their loved ones remains. they are being taken to the dna lab where they're going to give samples and then they're going to have to wait for their samples to be compared with those of the remains that have been brought here . and here is the labor party presidential candidate, peter o. b, a said saturday election results were fraudulent and that he actually won. obee says he will take the issue to the court governing party candidate latina who was declared the winner with the election commission, the saying he received 37 percent of the vote. let me read i'm sure that good people about julia. that was as flaw on let go and please for lunch on to the claim on mondays.
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all my name is roberta hill, i'm from the r mohawk nation grand river territory. i'm a survivor of the mohawk institute residential school. i was here as a student from 1957 to january, 1961, and i came here with 6 of my family. lot of bad memories here. nice for sure. these are really familiar to me. mr. play on these in on the girl said
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who was playing down in the base and on the girl side. and my mother had come up to the visiting area in the little kids had said your mother's here, you want to go see her and i and i ran, i ran but when i got to the doorway over there, i froze, right in front of the stairs. and i couldn't move, and i just stood there crying and crying, crying in the more i cried, the the worse it got. and i could see myself. i could actually like an auto body experience. i could see this little girl crying. and it was me, but i and the little girl said, well, if you don't, don't you love your mother? don't you want to see your mother nice in on? i did, i really did. she says she's going to leave you. you know, she's going to leave. if you don't go see her, so at that time i knew that she would go then i things just kind of came back on her to sleep. tears. i just took off running up those stairs and i went and sat on my mother. and at that time all i did was cry,
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i just cried and cried. and i was. ready it in once you loved her, it would just so hurtful to have to part with her again. because my mother was really, she was a really good mother, you know? ah, ah no much to say a mood good times here. they're all ridden by the bed. bed is enormous. there is a tremendous amount of evil that went on here. so the whole institution itself was run by fear. so it was very regimented, more like a military style. you lined up for everything, the line up for your meals lined up to go to school. you lined up to go to church,
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just like that fellow that routine and you would be okay if you followed in didn't break the rules, you know. so you just, you learn to follow the rules. i didn't have the freedom as a child or as it young teenager, i was always kind of wonders the supervision of somebody. but we got a boat 6 o'clock and were sent down to the cold play room. and it was always cold in the basement or early in the morning, still low to chillen air. and yet they put us in a big cement room and we had to keep warm. however, we could we learned all kinds of farm work. i worked on a farm so long i picked up a certain discipline for a hard worker to get me were going and i think at some point there was somebody
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here that i don't know if it was a kid or a supervisor told me, i would never leave here, you know, so that really stuck in my mind that i was going to be in this place forever. you're isolated, all you see is this world around you, this is it. that was my world. i didn't learn about all those. there are things that were going on until my adult life. i didn't know there was all those other residential schools. i don't think anybody in canada knew that much. so it was kept very secretive. and yet when you start to look at every residential school across canada, you find the same thing and i came to the login to do it. and i as well, 6 or 7 years old. and i spent 6 years here. i was picked up on a indian reserve at raven's out and logging on a road. ah,
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we're going to visit my grandmother one day. nice july day, back in 1955. there is for less than one girl. my sister. and we came over that little rise over there in there and down here in a black car full long. so i us and we didn't know whether to tie the driver said when you let her ride there he said no, we didn't know where they were. we kept on walking in, they could face her listener car and they kept trying to get us to get in. and we refused her covered yards that way. and they offered us some ice cream and jello at restaurant in timmonsville. and i had a screen there to we finished, we all loaded back up in the car,
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but they never went back to where they came. they went around away from the reserve . i fell asleep and i never woke up until we were coming up to the market. when after i got old enough, i realize i was goodness. like i said, my ned didn't know for the new fairs in a church. they didn't gear holiday the children year the, with the law flew i
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i believe was february, but 2 years ago i was on the border sessions that are at the chism. united church and tourism township is about 5 miles out of here. and my 1st step where the sessions meeting effect in there was 2 other members in the minister myself and the minister was going through the agenda that we were to talk about that day. and she mentioned the residential school system. and all of a sudden they started to shake and broke down crying and no idea. oh i, i didn't know what this was about at all. that from that i ended up going to my doctor and for some of the pro help for depression. and he referred me to a psychologist in north
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b and took her probably 20 minutes to determine the biggest part of my problem was from that incident, 50 years earlier, i was stationed there in the air, c, m. p, a. we had a territorial jailer, which most times i was a jail guard at night. and this day shift i happened to be assigned to whatever came on through the door. it would be sometime between november of $64.00 and april of $65.00. on a day shift i was assigned to assist an agent from the residential school system to pick up 2 children from a family in fort smith of the northwest territories. i went to the door of this home and the woman who lived there knew why we were there, and they knew it. she knew that her 22 daughters were being sent to residential schools. the mother was crying. both children were crying, probably 6 and 8 years old. and i talked the 6 year old from her arms actually
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and turned them over to the agent. he jumped in his car and took off to the airport and aerospace at the end of it. i saw never saw him. i don't remember the children's names, but i'll never forget the cries at the time, i didn't like the idea of taking kids away from the family bothered me in person being in the or c m p. i had no alternative who couldn't complain about it. the only thing i knew about the in the residential schools was say, please good formal education. i didn't see any problem with it. since then i've come to realize what they were a boat and i know differently now. and that's part of the story that i want to tell
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. it took up maybe 5 minutes of my life and i buried it back im 6465 and above 50 years later it came back to haunt me here in boston. ah oh boy, we were sitting at this at this very spot. i'm not sure if it was exactly the same table, but we're sitting at this very spot. ah ada, at a board meeting. and you remember, ron, you were on the board at the time and,
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and the board at that time had decided that they wanted to study this book called a healing journey for us all. and part of that, i took us into residential schools. well, let me, let me say 1st clearly that i think the residential school history within canada is one of the the, the greatest tragedies, if not the greatest tragedy in our whole, ah, history as a country. ah, it's in the damage that's been done ah, to so many lives and the damage that it continues to be done and that will be felt jet. it generationally ah, is, is just it's beyond one way. it's hard to even take it in.
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ah, residential schools are schools that were sent out by the government of canada. and there are other countries that have the same thing. but it was a policy that was put into place to bring all as many indigenous people as possible into the schools to educate them into the european way of life, to take you away from your culture, your language, all your traditions. and that's what it's about. now in order to separate those ties in your culture and your language, they had to separate children from families and communities. we more uniforms. you all dress the same, you had your hair cut the same, you were all one. and it was to assimilate us to make sure we didn't have the in, in left in us when i left here.
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oh they took us to the church and recently we had say prayers and things like that. we're allowed to talk in our language. we had to speak english, but it wasn't indoctrination like you didn't put us in one room and teach us indoctrinate us all day long or anything like that. just the way the routine to the place it was in and within the routine in speak. anything but english or you went to like man,
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school and the white man's church. you were the white man's clothes. all those are built in wasn't a classroom lecture kind of thing and it was there was ingrained in the system. there's about 11 years. they, it was taken from them. there was no mother, no father figures. nobody said good night or come and see you. if you are sick or something, no, we looked at it except that they put it in a big playroom, similar to this dining room. and we sort of looked after ourselves. ah,
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what was going on across this country that so many children were being taken so many children were being put into residential schools. and my thing is if, if they were such a wonderful school, they were models. everybody should have had, am nanine of europeans. everybody should had a residential school, not just one race of people as a very racist policy. you know, but that's what the intent was. it was to kelly indian in the child and pretty much they've done it. 3 get punished for being who you are. ah, it's school we're you're punished for for at least the infraction. the punishments were severe and punishment for things you never
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did. you never did am i, i, i don't think i ever did anything wrong that we deserve strap never. you got it. you never knew it. when you went over the line, they let you know, lay give you a beating the beating someone to assemble, but it was more than it. it was terror that accompanied each beating. for now, many when you have children put in an electric chair for inter came in r for punishment was a crimes against humanity and yet different things. and i've heard of other nice, haven't electric currents. and they brought us into a place like a little depress room, where most of the beatings went on me. and we went dinner, went on a time and, and got a good, shall act and with the letters, leather strapping like airways was afraid of it,
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but there we knew they're going to get it sooner or later. he just remembered them crying. it was a lot of crying in his fly slotted tears, and yet we find out it was like thousands upon thousands of children that were being abused. despite the beatings in the ferocity of some of the beatings, we still defied the authority to run away. the voice lighthouse over 60 boys displayed the summer. it was over lonely beyond the spare. from within, we each had our own battles to fight. we were lost slowly, scared and confused. where bringing us battle was to keep our secrets or laser shrouded in secrecy. no one could know we all collectively knew the kids
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were being raped and molested in large numbers. saw noise by reese, no one could know. no one would ever know. sodom and gomorrah had to be a nicer place. so he tried to escape the cardinal sin when ironing those cut were ferociously and relentlessly beaten with the leather machinery belts carried by all the staff, including the principal the can beaten until their screams echoed out to the earth and along the barns, down the laneway. and up the city streets meet and until there was silence, that was the spurious. despite this we ran away. i believe each of us tried to at least once to escape that voice prison. the hell is placed with demons. olive
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o f opened. there is the boilers that that far end is where i got molested time and time again. day after day, boy did i ever wish some good come liar from you and miss me somehow and nobody ever came and i just came on there feeling so dirty, rotten low as you can imagine. and i thought every kid over there knew that i had what happened to me when i think in all hands them because none ever bothered me. never asked me what happened in there. so i think we all got it at one
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point or other. it is a nasty, dirty place, but here's reagan melissa. you are staying against this wall here and he had his way with me. i was his mother high. ah this time in my life and i felt so dirty and so so own when he had me down in the boiler only took my clothes off. and i just stay here little guy, this disgusted or what he was doing. i
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think it's very, very possible that children did die here, but we'll never know. as yes, i've heard too many different stories for it to be all lies. if they're not buried here, they're probably buried somewhere on the property. and it's just one of those things that in time we may come across it, but this, this we can investigate if there is any truth to it. if there is anything in there just just from the people that i know from the survivors that i know that say that . yeah. they remember this being something and you don't just put a window at the bottom of a basement for any,
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i think you're on the list. you're always pointing a boundary. part of the center of mass, always ongoing love. we are the ones playing the extra mile. where are the media go? we go there and we give them a time to tell their story. mm. a l, g z, a whole newer and catering under the top stories are now to sierra a gathering of foreign ministers from the g. 20 group of nations in india has ended without an agreement on how to end the war and ukraine. your sex, your state,
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antony blinkin, says russia as shown, no interest in engaging on peace in ukraine. as far as the 1st face to face conversation between blinkin and his russian count bought sag a lever off since the start of the wolf. i told the foreign minister what i and so many others said last week at the united nations. and what so many g, 20 foreign minister said today, and this war of aggression engage in meaningful diplomacy that can produce a just and durable piece. present soleski is put forward a 10 point plan for adjusting durable piece. the united states stand ready to support ukraine through diplomacy to end the war on the spacious, president, putin, however, has demonstrated 0 interests and engaging, saying there's nothing to even talk about unless and until ukraine accepts, and i quote the new territory realities while doubling down on his brutalization of ukraine. ukraine is blaming russia for a strike on
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a residential block and their southern city was parisha that killed at least 4 people. a several others were injured. the attack destroyed many apartments in the 5 story building and emergency services, so they rescued 11 people from the rubble. the station master on duty during tuesdays train crash and grease the worst in the nation's history. as a bed and court facing charges, including negligent homicide, emergency crews are still coming through the wreckage. a head on collision in northern greece left at least 57 people dead. and here is labor party presidential candidate peter obee has said saturday's election results were fraudulent and that he actually won a governing party candidate bulletin abou was declared the winner with the election commission saying he received 37 percent of the vote. obee says he will take me a shoot. the courts still is government has begun the minutes. rising, the country is northern border with bolivia to control the entry of undocumented,
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my groups the military will be deployed for 90 days. i'll be back with a full news hour right after the 2nd half of canada's dark secret tuesday, wednesday to come by for now. i like finding old friends and when he is what i know her by from the residential school, the mohawk institute, when we 1st went in there, we were, my sister and i were separated into groups and i had one older girl that took me under her wing and my sister dawn when he looked after her. well, i don't know when i was there. i don't even know remember going there. i don't remember the people picking me up but of my home. i don't remember that all i know i was just there. so then i met this older
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person wellness, older girl. she kind of took care of me when i was growing up and she told me when she's ready to leave, cuz she was in 1230. you may be 40. she said that she was going to ask her mother to come and get me and takes you to take me home to be her little sister. but ad didn't happen because she she on cuz she got hurt. got her her, her band. i think i think somebody hit her on the tree and i don't know. i think she died,
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but i'm not really sure. but i don't know. well anyway, i been able to say in the last few years that they killed her and i was there. i saw what happened to her sometimes ave east dream up her. she would come to me in a dream, but it hurts to talk about it. because i remember when she used piggyback, we on her back and we run and play and and when i got her to pick me up, give me a hug and tell me like what we should meet,
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the women know after they smashed her in the tree. you know that some, sometimes you can hear it on tv on the reader shows that sound. that's a sound even if a glass breaks to they are both scream, then sometimes my family get madam i so i can help with that. since the sound, if scares me and makes me yell loud like back,
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the scene is a drawing child who shortly before was flailing away with his head above water in a raging river. he can swim, but the river is swift, unrelenting. he slips under the services roofing trying to catch another leaf, say breath, but he knows he's going on different. good. what terry's run upon the child's mind? no one can imagine. those thoughts will go down with him. the one to live is seen above. in the light on the surfaces of the river as he slowly sinks, his ear is silky and wavy, deserves still ever moving so slowly and reaching for no purpose, except that his will tells him to reach up. the lane surface
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phase in his body has no more move in except than the current. he tumbles lifelessly allowing a bonner in into oblivion. i left thinking i had come back one day in attack. those people that had attacked me in i, they didn't just attack me. they, i think they attacked everybody. but i, i wrote a book called art legacy in urgency road, dead book a i don't have his great desire to go back a worn bit them off bay i i, i have a forgive whether they're not around to forgive. when i realize
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the effect of this type of government administration head on 1000 people in my time, it disgusts me that day. i'm a canadian and i always thought canada was the greatest country in the world. and i am ashamed to say a canadian because it was a government is done the government wanted access to mineral rights, mining, lumbering,
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fisheries. all natural resources in canada has and they all are on a native land. of course. they were here 1st. so the government, i guess, determined rather than go to war with the natives, they would eliminate them room room and i know from my own experienced people that i knew they were raised by whites in the residential schools. so when they were finished their, their parents didn't accept them because they weren't native. and the white community did not accept them because they were native. so these people, news, 150000 children, grew up in limbo with no roots, no background, and no place they could call home. mm . oh, i knew it time when i was going to leave. i went to school at day and and it was
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the last day of school and summer. everything seemed greater than grasping greener and the sky was blower. and it was just a great day. he come home and they're like, you're a stranger, i'm a stranger to them, but they're a stranger to me too. so i had to go fine. cool. my relatives were, how was i connected to this community? i knew where i came from. i didn't know that, but i just didn't know how i fit in 150000 people were children were taken from their families. and as a result of that, 7 generations of native people grew up with no route.
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this is my friend carol, crunchy, whom i've known for a few years and appreciate her friendship and and what kind of thing she can tell us about her 1st nations. so having my father, my aunt and my uncles, and gone to residential school, my father never discussed his upbringing. he was silent. the home that we lived in was silent around who he was and how he was raised. so prior to the age of 30, i had no idea or no understanding of what had happened to my family. and i knew that there was something up like, there was something wrong, but i didn't know what that was. when i was finding all of these things about residential school, when i was 30 and my father had already passed away,
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my mother was still alive. and i started asking my, my aunt questions. it began to, i began to realize how strange everything was. and it began to see what those schools did and what the effect that we had and why my brothers and i had struggled so much with our emotional life. this was wrong to take children away from their parents and heard them into a school against their will. it just blew me away. and then when ron, when you had the courage to stand up and see that this was wrong and that you knew it was wrong when it happened. instead of standing up and said, i witnessed this and it didn't look that bad. i can't tell you what that
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does for people. i really can't and i don't care what bad things you might have done in your life or on. i know it was a whole lot cause her could birth, but they were raised by that they were completely erased. but what you don't hear about is what happens to adult people when their kids are ripped away. and those kids come back broken, but they come back broken to 2 adults that are insane. and that's the other half.
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so nobody is. okay. thank you. oh, noon. ah ah, but thank and ask for the survivors to stand up for a moment. can be here with survivors, please stand, the children and the grandchildren or survivors please stand up as well. things began to change when the survivors of the residential school experience went to
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court, beginning of the 1980s, but not really successful until the mid 19 ninety's. when the courts finally rule that they could sue the government for the abuses and went on in schools and the churches as well. the root of the t, r. c. as in survivors themselves. survivors said, we demand attention and we demand recognition for what it is and was that we experienced in the residential schools. i had a problem or i had a hearing problem. i what's mocked, i was teeth, i would pick non, sometimes they can function. i was hurting, so they say and yes, especially with these we were the recipient. they're most private moments in their life often.
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and we as listeners had to be there for them because we weren't just representing the commission. we were actually representing the hearing of the entire country in well as the commissioner for the truth and reconciliation commission was 6 of the stories of residential school survivors was difficult, emotionally, very challenging. but there is no doubt that when they cried often we did as commissioners, we always made it a point to repeat back to the survivors what it was that they had told us because we wanted them to know that we had heard them and that we believed them big boy, anything her give me that the want to apologize to my
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family for what i would do to i could i could tell my grandchildren i could tell my great grand certain earth that he loved the book. but with my own trailer it, i kept it hurts, it's hurting to leave the think both what i missed. it was a very, an emotional, very emotional time because the more you got into it, the more, the more things started to come up about residential school that you would start to remember. and then he'd listened everybody and it was a very, very difficult time. so i was involved right from that right from when the lawsuit started. so the trip reconciliation commission of canada was asked to assist the
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survivors to move from an arrow being victimised to the residential school experience, to becoming a involved in a process of establishing a better relationship with the government, with the churches, the story of the tree of residential schools in this country is a story about the resilience of children. they have supported me in his work, but at great loss to the relationships we could have had and which we will now try to recapture ah, do. c 6
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c oh, we did to school, so we awake in canada. this is not only about resilience, there's a whole lot of truth that'd be has been shared. it's also about reconciliation. and they're, they're not going to be any truth and reconciliation and my time, or in your time, it's going to take 2 or 3 for generations to work all this out to get in the history books and have it become commonplace that the guy next door knows would happen, the future of canada will students and be told that this is not an integral part of everything we are as a country. everything we are as canadians had, as
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a promise. we made crate here. all of us. mm. a z. the closing ceremonies in truth and reconciliation commission heading 5 kilometer walk from gatineau quebec to was in the city hall in ottawa, was approximately $7000.00 people participating. many natives, many non natives. there was different church groups, civic groups, and people just bringing their families out to participate and support the native communities. by the time the commission's work ended almost 7 years later, that we had established the credibility, the commission, not only in the eyes of survivors, but in the eyes of the country. the truth and reconciliation commission has brought
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an image of canada forward that now and close this history. the national center for truth and reconciliation was created by the truth and reconciliation commission in order to preserve all of the materials that were collected under the mandate to the t r c. but more than just preserving these materials, survivors right across the country of asked us to ensure that they are statements. and the other material that was collected finds their way into the hands of educators into the hands of researchers. so we have a very important and critical role and continuing to expose the truth and sure canadians understand the truth of what's happened in this country. and further contribute ongoing understanding, healing and reconciliation in this country. canadians
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when every residential school survivor is healed, i'll be nuts. that's how it would pick me until they're healed. i won't be and i'll keep talking to anybody who listen. ah, he's always home without hope we're done. you know, the house has to be hope. and when i look at my grandchildren, i think, yeah, there's a lot of hope. i see positive things try them. ah
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ah, with off we go with your world weather update, we'll kick this one off in australia and we've got a tropical low. i mentioned tropical low because that's hanging onto more moisture . i could gonna dump about a $100.00 to $200.00 millimeters of rain for the northern territory, a for western areas of queensland on friday. you zealand looks like this both for the north and south island. we've got pulse is a brain, but i gotta take you to the south pacific. it's active here. so 1st we had judy will roll through van iwatsu and now we've got kevin hot on it skills, look like it's just going to clip the capital port vila, on friday spin copious amounts of rain for southern malaysia and singapore that
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continues. on fridays, we go in for a closer look or just the other day singapore registered. it's what is february day on record, and here we are in march and that rain continues. we're talking more than half a meter of rain as of late. temperature is on the way up through china. we'll talk about that in one sec, but we've got some showers loc between the gang, see, and the pearl river valley. jung jo at 21 degrees. it's about a month ahead of schedule. and same goes for beijing at 18 degrees, that's a temperature we would expect to see for the month of april. things are quite across the korean peninsula and temperatures. and the double digits there is wall see soon. ah, the talk to al jazeera, we are, but should they not be more over science perhaps so foundations like yours? we listen when it comes to diversification, we don't do it in order to get through the rational none of your sources. we meet
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with global news makers. i'm talk about the store restock matter on al jazeera and 5432 more up front takes on the big issues. this isn't the one off. he's talking about a systemic issue here, black labs, and don't really matter. and the police were unflinching. questions is war with lawanda minute rigorous debate? people who are dying because of lack of medical treatment, challenging conventional wisdom. the fact that people are starting to get angry about this is in itself a sign of progress. join me, mark a lot hill for upright. what al jazeera ah ah. hello. lauren taylor. this is the amazon news i live from london coming up.
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