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Reconciliation does not stop at Orange Shirt Day for StellyB次元官网网址檚 students

Emma Godard was 10 when she first learned about residential schools. Her mother is MiB次元官网网址檏maq and she has family members who have stories of abuse and neglect.
8728541_web1_171004-PNR-orangeshirtday
StellyB次元官网网址檚 teachers and members of the W瘫S脕NE膯 First Nation stand in the StellyB次元官网网址檚 library, where students collected and displayed thoughts on reconciliation from the school community. (Hugo Wong/B次元官网网址 staff)

Emma Godard was 10 when she first learned about residential schools. Her mother is MiB次元官网网址檏maq and she has family members who have stories of abuse and neglect.

B次元官网网址淢y mum was kind of having a bad day and she started talking about it. And she just told me stories that other people have told her.B次元官网网址

Now a Grade 10 student at StellyB次元官网网址檚 Secondary in Central Saanich, Godard, her classmates and their teachers are engaging with truth and reconciliation, culminating in Orange Shirt Day, which many schools on the Saanich Peninsula observed on Fri., Sept. 29.

Orange Shirt Day was started by Phyllis Jack Webstad, a Northern Secwpemc (Shuswap) woman who had her orange shirt confiscated on her first day of residential school in 1973. In 2013, people in Williams Lake began to observe Orange Shirt Day in recognition of the legacy left by St. JosephB次元官网网址檚 Mission residential school, and it has since spread across the country.

Leading up to Orange Shirt Day, one class surveyed students, teachers and parents about their thoughts on reconciliation. They wrote them down and displayed them in the library. Students also heard from Indigenous author Monique Gray-Smith about residential schools, and local W瘫S脕NE膯 people came to the school and included students in bone games, a traditional guessing game.

Tracy Murphy, a Grade 10 social studies teacher, has been showing video clips from the Aboriginal PeopleB次元官网网址檚 Television Network (APTN) on incarceration rates among Indigenous people, and asked students to look at the Truth and Reconciliation CommissionB次元官网网址檚 94 Calls to Action, which are meant to provide concrete ways for Canadians to improve relations with Indigenous peoples.

When about her thoughts on reconciliation, she took a breath. B次元官网网址淚B次元官网网址檝e been asking so many people and I havenB次元官网网址檛 thought about it myself.B次元官网网址

Murphy, whose mastersB次元官网网址 thesis was on the Truth and Reconciliation Commision, said, B次元官网网址淚 think it means learning about whatB次元官网网址檚 happening and how the past still affects today. It means coming to terms with what I need to do to go forward as a Canadian to create a peaceful society.B次元官网网址

Murphy said that it has been a difficult topic to discuss between students, but that she tried to let students lead discussions and initiatives instead of imposing as the teacher. Some students, like Auzzie Chambers, stayed late after school with Godard and others to create posters marking the day. They only had white paper, so they used orange paint instead.

B次元官网网址淚 got no actual schoolwork done yesterday,B次元官网网址 Godard laughed.

Godard wants to go into law, and wants to work with Indigenous or LGBTQ community groups, but she does not know which direction she wants to go yet.

B次元官网网址淚tB次元官网网址檚 always hard for me to listen to everything but I understand that everyone else needs to learn about this, so IB次元官网网址檓 okay.B次元官网网址

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