A LeBreton Flats Park ceremony was one of many across Ontario and across Canada marking the second National Day of Truth and Reconciliation.
Remembering the Children, a one-hour commemoration organized by Aboriginal Peoples Television Network and the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation, was attended by dignitaries including Governor General Mary Simon, the first Indigenous person to hold that office, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.Sign up to receive daily headline news from the Ottawa SUN, a division of Postmedia Network Inc.
Despite facing many barriers, Indigenous peoples constantly work to improve their communities, create opportunity and “strengthen body, mind and spirit,” Simon said.Mekwan Tulpin, from Fort Albany First Nation near James Bay, has tears in her eyes as she listens to a powerful poem read by a residential school survivor during Friday’s event at LeBreton Flats.Simon called on “all of us to talk about reconciliation from coast to coast to coast. Raise it with family and friends.
Marchers covered parkway signs with covers reading “Every Child Matters” on one side and “Kichi Zibi Parkway” — Kichi Zibi translates to “great river” — on the other. “The lesson that we need to learn from this is that people back then did know about it, people back then had solutions to save the children’s lives, people back then were outraged, but, when the headlines died, so did the children,” Blackstock said.
“It is something needs to be spoken about every day,” Myran said. “It is something that needs to be spoken about at schools. This is something that needs to be in history books.”
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