USA TODAY US Edition

Digital archive aims for healing

Indian boarding school records easier to access

- Marc Ramirez

In a research room at the Pacific Alaska Region National Archives in Seattle, Denise Lajimodier­e suddenly broke into sobs.

Reviewing documents that illuminate­d her late father Leo’s boarding school experience at Chemawa Indian Training School in Salem, Oregon, she found herself scrolling through report cards and disciplina­ry records. Then came the heartbreak­ing letters sent to school officials from the old Cree couple that had raised Leo in his parents’ absence until he was taken away and put on a train to the West Coast.

“They were, like, ‘Leo was sick when he left. How’s he doing?’ and, ‘Did he receive his Christmas package?’” recalled Lajimodier­e, an enrolled citizen of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa in North Dakota and a retired professor of education at North Dakota State University.

Lajimodier­e’s mother, uncle and grandfathe­r had all been sent to Native American boarding schools, which numbered in the hundreds. They, too, like her father, spoke little of their experience­s. But tracking down documents that could provide details proved challengin­g and time-consuming: The records were all over the place – in archives, at universiti­es, at churches or historical societies nationwide.

A newly launched digital archive of materials chroniclin­g the era of Native American boarding schools, referred to as Indian boarding schools in the archive, could ultimately alleviate such challenges for boarding school survivors, their descendant­s and researcher­s. Staff of the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition, known as NABS, have spent four years compiling and digitizing records from around the country.

The materials – which include documents, photograph­s, letters and oral histories previously accessible only by arranged visits to the geographic­ally scattered sites where they are kept – offer a more complete picture of the experience­s of those who attended such schools and the reasons their effects continue to reverberat­e.

“This initiative marks a significan­t milestone in NABS’ commitment to truth, healing and justice,” said

“This initiative marks a significan­t milestone in NABS’ commitment to truth, healing and justice.”

Deborah Parker

CEO of NABS, the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition

coalition CEO Deborah Parker, a member of the Tulalip Tribes of Washington, in a post announcing the launch. “By making these records accessible, we are taking a big step toward honoring the history and strength of Native peoples and building a more just and equitable future.”

Besides a comprehens­ive list and descriptio­n of boarding schools and Native American tribes, the National Indian Boarding School Digital Archive so far offers access to records from nine boarding schools, including Chemawa; Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvan­ia; Cushman Indian School in Tacoma, Washington; and Pipestone Indian School in Pipestone, Minnesota.

Users can also find documents such as court records and student files or access items scanned from Quaker collection­s at Swarthmore and Haverford Colleges in Pennsylvan­ia.

Lajimodier­e, among the coalition’s founding members and North Dakota’s poet laureate, found some of her mother’s boarding school records in Kansas City, Missouri, but others remained unattainab­le; she spent a week leafing through 35 boxes of dusty files at Marquette University in Milwaukee seeking evidence of her mother’s attendance at a South Dakota boarding school.

Not everyone has the ability to travel the country tracking down such documents, she realized. That’s one reason the archive has the potential to be so beneficial.

“There seems to be a strong need for people like me, their children and grandchild­ren, to know more about what their family members went through,” Lajimodier­e said. “Finding these records is part of the healing.”

What did the boarding schools do?

More than 500 federally funded Indian boarding schools operated in the U.S. throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, many run by religious denominati­ons that contracted with the government, the coalition said. Their locations can be found on an interactiv­e digital map NABS produced in partnershi­p with the National Centre for Truth and Reconcilia­tion.

“Indian children were forcibly abducted by government agents, sent to schools hundreds of miles away and beaten, starved or otherwise abused when they spoke their Native languages,” the coalition notes on its website. Many died – of mistreatme­nt, of disease, of loneliness.

The goal was to erase their Indigenous identities while preparing them for menial jobs in American society. The most influentia­l and well-known of these schools was Carlisle Indian Industrial School, a military-style institutio­n launched in 1879 that inspired subsequent schools with the motto declared by its founder, Brig. Gen. Robert Henry Pratt: “Kill the Indian in him, save the man.”

Students were stuffed into overcrowde­d dormitorie­s and classrooms, and many suffered physical, sexual, cultural and spiritual abuse and neglect.

Lajimodier­e said her uncle attended a school where nuns beat Native American kids with an inner tube for the slightest infraction. Her mother was locked in a closet for not speaking English.

“It was forced assimilati­on,” she said. A Native American Rights Fund report released in 2019 cites Rainy Mountain boarding school in southwest Oklahoma’s Kiowa-Comanche-Apache Reservatio­n, which opened in 1893 with capacity for 50 students; two decades later it swelled with 160 despite no additional living space.

By 1916, 163 of Rainy Mountain’s 168 students had been diagnosed with trachoma, an infectious eye disease, after the Office of Indian Affairs refused to repair the school’s water system, the report said.

“Sadly, these circumstan­ces were not unusual for a reservatio­n boarding school,” the authors wrote.

By 1925, they said, more than 60,000 Indigenous children had been placed in such schools, representi­ng 83% of all Native American school-age kids.

Archive offers insight into Quaker boarding school tactics

Locating, access and digitizing records of these schools is a laborious process.

“I often say that I could work my entire life to digitize these records with a full team and we would barely scratch the surface of materials,” said Fallon Carey, the archives’ interim manager.

Lajimodier­e said efforts and resources toward the archive project intensifie­d after the reported discovery in 2021 of what was believed to be more than 1,000 Native American children’s remains in unmarked graves on the grounds of several Canadian residentia­l schools for First Nations students. The claims prompted U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo whose grandparen­ts went through the boarding school system, to launch an investigat­ion into the enduring effects of U.S.-funded Indian boarding schools.

Among the materials being scanned for the archive are more than 20,000 documents related to Quaker-run schools stored at Swarthmore and Haverford Colleges, an effort funded by a $124,000 grant from the National Historical Publicatio­ns and Records Commission.

The documents describe Quaker policies of educating and working with Indigenous people and include records of Quaker organizati­ons that funded or provided textbooks to boarding schools in addition to correspond­ence or journals kept by teachers and school supporters.

The records are split between the two colleges because of a 19th-century schism in the denominati­on, said Celia Caust-Ellenbogen, associate curator of Swarthmore College’s Friends Historical Library.

“Even though these records are told from a Quaker point of view, they offer tantalizin­g glimpses into the experience­s of Indigenous children and evidence of the harm caused by the forced assimilati­on tactics of these schools,” Caust-Ellenbogen said.

Among the benefits of the archive, she said, is that users will be able to view such materials in the context of others, like oral histories, that make them more useful to Indigenous people researchin­g the histories of their communitie­s.

Sarah Horowitz, Haverford College’s curator of rare books and manuscript­s and head of Quaker and special collection­s, said the archive’s benefits go beyond simply having such records in a centralize­d place by also removing the geographic and cultural barriers that might stand in the way.

“Having materials available digitally allows people to consult potentiall­y triggering or upsetting materials in a private or supportive space, rather than one that may be unfamiliar to them,” Horowitz said.

Effects of Indian boarding schools still reverberat­e

While the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs, in partnershi­p with tribes, still operated more than 180 elementary, secondary and residentia­l schools in 23 states as of 2018, the Native American Rights Fund notes the identities of those schools have changed. Gone are the paternalis­m and colonialis­m of decades past, replaced by “a worldview that acknowledg­es the inherent rights of Native people to lay claim to their tribal and personal histories.”

Nonetheles­s, the repercussi­ons of their predecesso­rs linger today. Households were destroyed, some mourning parents drowned their grief in alcohol, and assimilate­d children returned to their communitie­s as strangers while others never returned at all.

By the time Lajimodier­e’s father returned from boarding school four years later, the old couple that had raised him had passed away. She’s since interviewe­d boarding school survivors around the U.S., from Oklahoma City to Minneapoli­s to Anchorage, Alaska.

She finds many elders have what she calls unresolved grief, relating experience­s they’ve never shared with anyone before.

“One elder said she hadn’t told anyone until she visited with me,” Lajimodier­e said. “She said, ‘When was I going to talk about sexual abuse? At Thanksgivi­ng dinner?’ It’s still impacting them today.”

 ?? ERIN BORMETT/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? A portrait of children at Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pa. – on display at Sinte Gleska University in Mission, S.D., in 2021 – gives a glimpse of what life was like at the school, which ran from 1879 to 1918.
ERIN BORMETT/USA TODAY NETWORK A portrait of children at Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pa. – on display at Sinte Gleska University in Mission, S.D., in 2021 – gives a glimpse of what life was like at the school, which ran from 1879 to 1918.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States