Daily Breeze (Torrance)

U.S. churches reckon with the traumatic legacy of Native schools

- By Peter Smith

The discoverie­s of hundreds of unmarked graves at former residentia­l schools for Indigenous children in Canada have prompted renewed calls for a reckoning over the traumatic legacy of similar schools in the United States — and in particular by the churches that operated many of them.

U.S. Catholic and Protestant denominati­ons operated more than 150 boarding schools between the 19th and 20th centuries, according to researcher­s. Native American and Alaskan Native children were regularly severed from their tribal families, customs, language and religion and brought to the schools in a push to assimilate and Christiani­ze them.

Some U.S. churches have been reckoning with this activity for years through ceremonies, apologies and archival investigat­ions, while others are just getting started. Some advocates say churches have more work to do in opening their archives, educating the public about what was done in the name of their faith and helping former students and their relatives tell their stories of family trauma.

“We all need to work together on this,” said the Rev. Bradley Hauff, a Minnesotab­ased Episcopal priest and missioner for Indigenous Ministries with the Episcopal Church.

“What’s happening in

Canada, that’s a wakeup call to us,” said Hauff, who is enrolled with the Oglala Sioux Tribe.

This painful history has drawn relatively little attention in the United States compared with Canada, where the recent discoverie­s of graves underscore­d what a 2015 government commission called a “cultural genocide.”

That’s beginning to change.

This month top officials with the U.S. Episcopal Church acknowledg­ed the denominati­on’s own need to reckon with its involvemen­t with such boarding schools.

“We must come to a full understand­ing of the legacies of these schools,” read a July 12 statement from Presiding Bishop Michael

Curry and the Rev. Gay Clark Jennings, president of the denominati­on’s House of Deputies. They called for the denominati­on’s next legislativ­e session in 2022 to earmark funds for independen­t research into church archives and to educate church members.

Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, the first Native American to serve as a U.S. Cabinet secretary, announced last month that her department would investigat­e “the loss of human life and the lasting consequenc­es of residentia­l Indian boarding schools.” That would include seeking to identify the schools and burial sites.

U.S. religious groups were affiliated at least 156 such schools, according to the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition, a private group formed in 2012 to raise awareness and address the traumas of the institutio­ns. That’s more than 40% of the 367 schools documented so far by the coalition.

Eighty-four were affiliated with the Catholic Church or its religious orders, such as the Jesuits. The other 72 were affiliated with various Protestant groups, including Presbyteri­ans (21), Quakers (15) and Methodists (12). Most have been closed for decades.

Samuel Torres, director of research and programs for the coalition, said church apologies can be a good start but “there is a lot more to be done” on engaging Indigenous community members and educating the public.

Such informatio­n is crucial given how little most Americans know about the schools, he said, both in their impact on Indigenous communitie­s and their role “as an armament toward acquisitio­n of Native lands,” he said.

“Without that truth, then there’s really very limited possibilit­ies of healing,” said Torres, who is a descendant of Mexica/Nahua ancestors, an Indigenous group from presentday Mexico.

Hauff noted that the experience­s of former students, such as his own parents, ranged widely. Some said that even amid austerity, loneliness and family separation, they received a good education, made friends, learned skills and freely spoke tribal languages with peers. But others talked of “unspeakabl­e, cruel abuse,” including physical and sexual assault, malnourish­ment and being punished for speaking Native languages.

“Even if some of the children did say they had a positive experience, it did come at a price,” Hauff said. “Our church worked hand in hand with the government to assimilate these children.”

In Canada, where more than 150,000 Indigenous children attended residentia­l schools over more than a century, a National Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission identified 3,201 deaths amid poor conditions.

The United Church of Canada, which operated 15 such schools, has apologized for its role, opened its archives and helped identify burial sites.

The Catholic Church’s response in Canada remains controvers­ial. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in June that he was “deeply disappoint­ed” the Vatican has not offered a formal apology. Pope Francis expressed “sorrow” following the discovery of the graves and has agreed to meet at the Vatican in December with school survivors and other Indigenous leaders.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, meanwhile, said it would look for ways to assist in the Interior Department’s inquiry.

“We cannot even begin to imagine the deep sorrow these discoverie­s are causing in Native communitie­s,” spokeswoma­n Chieko Noguchi said.

The Jesuit-affiliated America Magazine is urging U.S. Catholic bishops not to repeat their mishandlin­g of cases of child sex abuse by priests.

“The church in the United States must demonstrat­e that it has learned from ... such failures,” the magazine said in an editorial.

Other churches have addressed their legacy to varying degrees.

Leaders of the Presbyteri­an Church (U.S.A.) traveled to Utqiagvik, Alaska, in 2017 to deliver a sweeping apology before a packed school auditorium for the treatment of Indigenous persons in general, and specifical­ly for how it operated the boarding schools.

The Rev. Gradye Parsons, former stated clerk for the denominati­on, told the gathering that the church had been “in contempt of its own proclaimed faith” in suppressin­g Native spiritual traditions amid its zeal to spread Christiani­ty. “The church judged when it should have listened.”

The United Methodist Church held a ceremony of repentance in 2012 for historic injustices against Native peoples. In 2016, it acknowledg­ed its role in the boarding schools in tandem with a government effort to “intentiona­lly” destroy traditiona­l cultures and belief systems.

 ?? UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA ARCHIVES VIA AP ?? In this 1910s photo provided by the United Church of Canada Archives, students write on a chalkboard at the Red Deer Indian Industrial School in Alberta. In Canada, where more than 150,000Indigen­ous children attended residentia­l schools over more than a century.
UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA ARCHIVES VIA AP In this 1910s photo provided by the United Church of Canada Archives, students write on a chalkboard at the Red Deer Indian Industrial School in Alberta. In Canada, where more than 150,000Indigen­ous children attended residentia­l schools over more than a century.

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