Edmonton Journal

Nuns give residentia­l school documents to museum

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The order of nuns that staffed numerous residentia­l schools and 10 hospitals in British Columbia over more than 160 years is handing over ownership of its archives to the Royal B.C. Museum.

The museum and Sisters of Saint Ann announced in a joint statement Wednesday that the transfer will be expedited and allow for the records to be digitized.

Alicia Dubois, the museum's CEO, says the transparen­t access to the comprehens­ive residentia­l school records is essential to truth and reconcilia­tion efforts.

Members of the nuns' order worked at the Kamloops Indian Residentia­l School, where the local First Nation has asked for more documents in its quest to identify the remains of hundreds of children believed to be buried near the former school.

The statement says the sisters will fund an archivist to help in the management of the process, while the museum will be responsibl­e for allowing access to residentia­l school survivors, their families and Indigenous communitie­s.

Sister Marie Zarowny, president of the Sisters of Saint Ann, says they recognize access to the archives is just a single step toward reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples.

“Our hope is that the archive transfer and digitizati­on will contribute toward a greater understand­ing of what took place in the residentia­l school system, and the harm and trauma students experience­d.”

The Tk'emlups te Secwepemc announced a year ago that suspected unmarked graves of as many as 215 children were found near the site of the former Kamloops residentia­l school.

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