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tv   Canadas Dark Secret  Al Jazeera  March 3, 2023 3:00pm-4:01pm AST

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school psychologists with the turkish red crescent into this camp for displaced people. they listen, hold hands, offer pats on the back and play games with children. sometimes, just offering a blanket or a cup of coffee is comfort enough. in that moment, the psychologist say in the upheaval of the earthquakes aftermath, children are particularly vulnerable. the president of the turkish ride crescent says it's ability to provide mental health services. 2 survivors is co humble, considering the enormous need required in the coming weeks, months and years. ah, don't you all deserve me, said rabo, reminder of all top news stories. cambodian opposition leader can soccer, has been found guilty of treason and sentenced to 27 years house arrest. so car was
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arrested in 2017 and charged with trying to overthrow the government inclusion with the us. these denied the accusations rights group say the case is part of prime minister and sends efforts to suppress all opposition. tony chang has more from bangkok. well, i don't think anyone's particularly surprised. this is a trial which has been ongoing for the last 3 years. kim, so cause been in detention either in prison or under house arrest since 2017. and it seemed very unlikely that there was going to be any lenient see or certain any chance of walking out of court today. a free man? none the less the 27 year sentence on what i think most people accept a very trumped up charges. it seems very severe. chem sir car is 69 years old. as i said, he spent most of the last 7 years in detention. this is effectively a life sentence. the court in bella, luce, a sentence,
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the 2022 nobel peace prize winner layers by let's key to 10 years in prison. the pro democracy activist was convicted of financing, protest in taxation. he said that he was being persecuted for political reasons. be allowed ski is the founder of that. he has no human rights group which is supported, jailed anti government protest as since 1996, the number of people killed in a training fashion. northern grace has no reason to 57, but that's expected to rise as crews continue searching through the record, wreckage rail work is across the grades to partner strike on thursday. as anger against ortiz grow protested, say they feel frustrated by years of underfunding and inadequate safety infrastructure. he's military leader has criticize what he called degrading treatment inflicted on sub saharan african migrants into nicea. dozens of migrants from guinea have been arrested and repent, created in the crackdown during the past month. that's after present case. i eat a key sub saharan african of carrying out
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a wave of crimes. he also said they were trying to change the country demographic makeup. the situation has been very difficult to nisha. we live in health. we don't go out. people who have papers are afraid to go out. when we go out the catches and put us in jail, people talk about recreation. normally they send you to the airport, but they have prepared special prison for subs her. and when they catch you, they said you did what? there are many means who are in prison, to senior politicians from tennessee, his main opposition party have been arrested. it's the latest staffing practice on critics of president. ty said several opposition figures, judges, and radio station director have been house as last month. so he does accuse them of plotting against state security. chilion stepped up its military presence on his northern border with through and bolivia. the government is trying to stop the influx of undocumented migrants most come from venezuela, peru, haiti, and columbia officials and gaza have called for help to personify
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a landfill site. they say the place last 2 days and calls and environmental catastrophe. the cause is not yet known. authorities, according to international pressure on israel to lift its blockade and lead in equipment ortiz in the philippines. a scrambling to contain an oil spill from a tanker. the ship carrying 800000 lease the diesel fuel sank on an island south west of manila on tuesday. the 7 coastal towns have banned fishing and swimming. this village flows farther south, french president monro mac chrome is promising $53000000.00 to a new global scheme to reward countries for protecting the forest and by diversity . the pledge was announced at the end of the one forest summit and double aimed at renewing targets of preserving and managing the wolf forest sustainably. a group of astronauts as arrived at the international space station. thus they sec, falcon, 9 rocket dog safely on friday, a day after blasting off. sorry to team
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a fall into orbit. 2 americans are russian and an amorality. they'll stay on the space station carrying out experiments for the next 6 months. those were the headlines here and i'm just in a buck with more news in half now. but next is canada's dark secret to stay with us . i ah
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ah ah ah ah, ah.
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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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i 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 cry cry. in the more i cried, 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 and nice. you know, and 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 honestly, tears i just took off running up those stairs. and i went and sat on my mother.
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and at that time all i did was cry, i just cried and cried. and it wasn't because it in 10 loved her. i 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,
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you lined up to go to school, you lined up to go to church, just like that fellow that routine and you would be okay if you followed and 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 a young teenager, i was always kind of wonders the supervision of somebody. but we got about 6 o'clock and were sent down to the cold play room and it was always cold in the basement early in the morning, still low to chillen air. and yet they put us in the 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 that i picked up a certain discipline for a hard worker to get me. we're 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 other 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 secret up. and yet, when you start to look at every residential school across canada, you find the same thing. name came the law against the nunez road 6 or 7 years ago. and i spent 6 years here. i was picked up on indian reserve, raymond. so walking on the road, now
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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 and we hadn't burned down here in a black car full alongside of us. and we didn't know was that to tie the driver said, when you lay her right there. i said no, we didn't know where they were. we kept on walking and they kept face for the 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 toronto. and i had
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a screen there to we finished. we all loaded back up the car. 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 against but after i got old enough, i realized i was good. now, like i said, my dad didn't know for i been in affairs in the churches they didn't gear holiday, but the children here. oh oh. oh, who
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i believe was february, but 2 years ago i was on the board of sessions that are at the chism. united church and tourism township is about 5 miles out of here. and my 1st were to sessions meeting effect in there was 2 other members in the ministered 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 i started to shake and broke down crying and no idea i i didn't know what this was about at all. i from that i ended up going to my doctor and for some of the pro help her depression. and he referred me to
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a psychologist in north 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 years, m p a. we had a territorial jailer, which most times i was a jail guard at night. and this day shift i happen 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 took the northwest territories. i went to the door of this home and the woman who lived there knew why 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,
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probably 6 and 8 years old. and i took the 6 year old from her arms actually 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 it 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. ah, since then i've come to realize what they were a boat and i've no differently now. and that's part of the story that i want to
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tell. it took up maybe 5 minutes of my life. and i buried it back in 6465. and above 50 years later, it came back to haunt me. here in a pause in, oh boy, we were sitting at this at this very spot i, i'm not sure if it was exactly the same table, but we're sitting at this very spot. i'm at a, 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 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 dressed the same. you had your haircut 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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they took us to the church every sunday 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 that in speak. anything but english are you into like man school you went to white man's
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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 me look guarantee, except that they put us 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 m nanine of europeans. everybody had 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 for you get punished for being who you are. ah ah, it's a school where you are punished for through least that interaction thing the the punishments were,
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were severe and punishment for things you never did. you never did am i, i, i don't think i ever did anything wrong that would deserve a strap never. and yet you got it. you never knew it. when you went over the line, they let you know they give you a beating. the beating sounds were simple, but it was more than it. it was terry. that accompanied each beating. for now, many when you have children put in an electric chair for inter came in or for punishment was a crimes against humanity and yet different things. and i've heard of other guys have an electric currents and they brought us into a place like all the pressure room where most of the beatings went on. and we went in her one at a time and go to good sherlock and with the letters, leather strapping airways was afraid of it,
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but everybody knew they were going to get it sooner or later. he just remembered them crying was a lot of crying in his fly slotted tears. and yet we find out at least 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 boy site house over 60 boys. despite the summer, it was over a lonely beyond despair. from within, we each had our own battles to fight. we were lost slowly, scared and confused, where biggest battle was to keep our secrets or laser shrouded in secrecy. no one could know we all collectively knew kids were
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being raped and molested in large numbers. saw noise by rece. 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 wait until their screams echoed out to the earth and along the barns down the laneway. and up the city streets, meat 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
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hellish place with demons, all of old ben . it's open. there's the boilers that that far end is where i got molested time and time again. ne. after day, boy did i ever wish somebody would come meyer some you would 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 it all. and then because none ever bothered me,
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never asked me what happened in there. so i think we all got it at one point or other. but it is a nasty, dirty place. but here's where i got molested. are you ever standing against this wall here? and he had his way with me and i was just mo, that hi ah is the time of my life and i felt so dirty and so. so all alone, when he had me down in the boiler room and he took my clothes off. and i just standing here little guy, this disgusted it when he was doing miss,
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i 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. if they remember this being something and you don't just put
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a window at the bottom of a basement for any, for no reason. ah ah women, ron micro businesses are key to center goals development and to improved food security . access to finance helps them succeed. since 2014, nearly a 180 micro enterprises,
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collectives and small businesses across synagogue received concession or refinancing. these loans were made possible by an initiative administered by the q rate good will fund the q 8 fund partners in development. i care about helping you f, engaging with the rest of the world. i cover foreign policy, national purity, this is a political em half here. the conflict, are we telling the good story? we're really interested in taking you in to a place that you might not visit otherwise and to actually feel as if you were there. lou. want you all to 0 me sell rahman and die. ha, reminder of all top news stories come back in opposition. leader chem soccer has been found guilty of treason and sentenced
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a 27 years house arrest. scar was arrested in 2017 and charged with trying to overthrow the government inclusion with the u. s. he's denied the accusations rights group say the case is part of prime minister and sons efforts to suppress all opposition a caught in belarus, a sentence the 2022 nobel peace prize winner layers that by let ski to 10 years in prison, the pro democracy activists was convicted of financing protests and tax evasion. he said he was being persecuted for political reasons. the latchkey is the founder of the of the asner human rights group, which has supported jailed anti government protested since 1996. the number of people killed and a trained crash in northern greece as resin to 57. well, workers across grees have extended their strike into a 2nd day as anger against authorities grow. broad testers say that they feel frustrated by years of under funding and inadequate safety infrastructure. denise military leader has to criticize what he call the degrading treatment inflicted on
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sub saharan african migrants into nicea. dozens of canadians have been repatriated and others are awaiting future flights. now this follows comments by 2 nicea in present, case said, accusing migrants of perpetuating a wave of crime and trying to change the country's demographic makeup. look at that . the situation has been very difficult in tunisia. we live in hell, we don't go out. people who have papers are afraid to go out when we go out the kitchen and put us in jail. people talk about repatriation. normally they send you to the airport, but they have prepared a special prison for sub saharan. when they catch you, they send you there. there are many gibbons who are in prison to senior politicians from tennessee as main opposition party have been arrested. is the latest step of the crackdown on critics of present case said several opposition figures judges under radio station director have been held since last month. officials in garza have called out to help to put out a fire landfills site. they say the blaze could last. the days and cause an
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environmental catastrophe of the cause is not yet known. authorities are calling for international pressure on israel to lift its blockade and let equipment in. those were the headlands. i'll be back with more news in half now in the news i. but next on al jazeera, we continue with canada as dark secret. do stay with us. i liked finding old friends in winnie as well. 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 hurley and my sister dawn when he looked after her. well, i don't, you 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. i know i was just there.
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so when i met this older person, while the cylinder 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, maybe 14. she said that she was going to ask her mother to come and get me and take she was to take me home to be her little sister. but ad didn't happen because she she am cuz she got hurt. she got hurt, hurt her bad. i think i think somebody hit her on the tree
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and i don't know. i think she died, but i'm not really sure. but i don't know. well anyway, i've been able to say in the last few years that they killed her and i was there. i saw what happened to her so 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 is piggyback, we on her back and we run in play. and when i got her to pick me up, she give me a hug names to tell me who are we should meet now
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after they smashed her in the tree. you know that sound? sometimes we can hear it on tv, on the reader shows that sound, that's the sound. even if a glass breaks to they are out scream and, and sometimes my family get, madam i still, i can help with that. since the sound, if scares me and makes me yell loud like bad,
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the scene is a drawing child who just shortly before was flailing away with his head a well water in a raging river. he can swim, but the river is swift, unreal landing. he slips under the services roofing, trying to catch another lake, say breath, what he knows he's going under for good. what terry's run upon the child's mind. knowing can imagine those thoughts will go down with him. the one to live is seen above. in the late on the surfaces of the river, who 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 phase in his body
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has no more moon except then in the current he tumbled lifelessly along a barn in into oblivion. i left thinking i had come back one day in attack. those people that had attacked me and i, they didn't just attack me they, i think they attacked everybody. but um i wrote a book called art legacy in urgent. they wrote that book. they don't have this great desire to go back. a warren beat them off bay i i, i have a forgive whether they're not around to forgive. when i realize the
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effect that this type of government administration had 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, i'm canadian because it was government is done. the government wanted access to mineral rights, mining, lumbering,
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fisheries. all natural resources canada has and they all are on the 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. lou 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. ah, it, oh,
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i knew air time when i was going to leave. i went to school at day and and it was the last day of school in summer. everything seemed greater than grass im, greener and the sky was over 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, your children were taken from their families. and as long as a result of that 7 generations of native people grew up with no root.
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this is my friend carol, could she whom i've known for a few years and appreciate her friendship and and what kind of things she can tell us about her 1st nations. so having my father, my aunt and my uncles, um, 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 teach 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 with it happened instead of standing up and said,
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i witnessed this and it didn't lock the bat. i can't tell you what that 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 what's a whole lot cause sure could birth. but they were raised by that they were completely erased by that. but what you don't hear about is what happens to that old people when their kids are ripped away. and those kids come back broken. but they come back broken to 2
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adults that are insane. and that's the other half. so nobody is okay. good. ah ah. awe thanks. and ask for the survivors to stand up for a moment and be here with us. survivors please stand. with children and the grandchildren of survivors, please stand up as well. things began to change when the survivors of the
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residential school experience went to 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 mark i was t i would take none. sometimes it, so get a can function. i was very so they say that i'm here for especially for children and try to be, you know, 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's 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 told us because we wanted them to know that we had heard them and that we believed them
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big boy, anything happened to me or want to apologize to my 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 boat but what i missed it was a very yon emotional, very emotional time because the more you not into it, the more, the more things started to come up about residential school that you would start to remember that you'd listen to everybody, and it was a very, very difficult time. so i was involved right from that right from when the lawsuit
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started. so the truth reconciliation commission of canada was asked to assist the survivors to move from an arrow being victims to the residential school experience, to becoming involved in the 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 in which we will now try to recapture ah b o. 2
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2 6 into 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 there are, there are gonna be any truth and reconciliation in my time or in your time. it's gonna 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
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a country. everything we are as canadians. how does a promise? we new credit here, all of a to z, the closing ceremonies in truth and reconciliation commission heading 5 kilometer walk from gatineau, quebec to 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,
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but in the eyes of the country. the truth and reconciliation commission has brought an image of canada forward that now and close this history. ah, 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 the country. and further contribute ongoing understanding, healing and reconciliation in this country. canadians
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no longer have an excuse though, which i think is one of the most critical things about this process of truth reconciliation. ah, the, i don't know, or i didn't know really is no longer defensible, had ah saw oh, with this you see the one
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0, very near being with i'm very hopeful. i'm still a bit scared as to what's happening and what could continue to happen. i want to say action, i want less talk and more action. so we all know that something is changing, in terms of hailing for the native folk and for white, and brown, and yellow canada. ah, with
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everyone there is a unique, they're expressing their, their culture. and the wooden genuine things about it, the color of the old fits the dancers, the songs when
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every residential school survivor is healed. i'll be and that's, that's how it works. until they're healed. i won't be. 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. ah. well it records again chilly,
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recorded its warmest ever winter santiago's warmest ever february, and now with sunshine blazing down here. but his eyes up to hit the march record. and there's a heat wave in this general area, uruguay, the central part of argentina. and maybe central chile once again with temperatures, typically $8.00 to $10.00 above average. now south of it windy wet and snowy weather is fairly typical. most of at the shower caught intense in paraguay, but less so in southeast of brazil. and then you get big gap before you pick up the heavy ones. again, there's a warning out of the potential for flash, flooding, and literal ecuador of the western side of ecuador. you're like in the same as potentially true, i think on this northeastern part of brazil, possibly even in puerto rico, a big push of thunderstorms as well. with jenny speaking, this is reasonable. weather was daily lighted showers the extreme heat we saw in eastern mexico up until yesterday been pushed out of the way. because the cold came out of the california storm, which is now cold air coming in, will make me want to get into
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a pretty nasty storm system running up to their higher valley with more $10.00 to $20.00 centimeters, the snow likely all, mat northridge and tornadoes. luckily on the southern edge then coming down the pacific coast. ah yes, another winter storm. ah ah. ready ready ah, ah ah
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ah, wherever you go in the world, one airline goes to make it feel exceptional. katara always going places to go on counting the coffee, you benz petrol power caused by 2035. is this the end of combustion engine? vehicles, airlines profit flying high because the industry keep up with the surgeon demand plus you dont forgotten crisis? will anyone come to doff was a counter the cost on al jazeera? ah ah. hello. hello robin, you're watching the out. is there a news our life? why.

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