OTTAWA – The Minister of Indigenous Affairs has asked the Our Lady of Guadalupe Circle, a coalition of Catholic groups, to help government efforts to obtain a papal apology for the Church’s role in residential schools.
“As an essential component of healing and reconciliation, the survivors of Canada’s Indian residential schools and their families deserve an apology from the Pope on behalf of the Roman Catholic Church,” said Indigenous and Northern Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett in a May letter co-signed by Senator Murray Sinclair, the former chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and NDP MP Charlie Angus, who recently co-sponsored a motion to invite a papal apology that passed with all-party support in the House of Commons on May 1.
“As you may be aware, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been very clear about
the Government of Canada’s commitment to reconciliation, including the
implementation of all 94 Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission,” the letter said. Call to Action
#58 asks for the Pope to apologize on Canadian soil for
“the Roman Catholic Church’s role in the spiritual, cultural, emotional,
physical and sexual abuse of First Nations, Inuit and Métis children in
Catholic-run residential schools.
“We would like to invite representatives of the Guadalupe Circle to
join us at a discussion table with residential school survivors to discuss with
them the role the Circle can play toward obtaining an apology and to advance
the cause of reconciliation,” read the letter to Circle co-chair Archbishop
Murray Chatlain of Keewatin-Le Pas.
“We were surprised to get a letter from the minister,” said Archbishop Chatlain.
“We had asked for a meeting a couple of years before and she wasn’t able to
make it.
“One of the positives is that they’re at least aware of the Circle and are
interested in meeting with us, which we also have an interest in doing....
We’re preparing a response (to the Minister’s letter), but that’s going to take
a little time,” Archbishop Chatlain said.
The Circle is a coalition of seven
Catholic groups, including the Knights of Columbus, the Catholic
Women’s League, Development and Peace, the Canadian Religious Conference, the
Canadian Catholic Aboriginal Council and Indigenous peoples. It was formed by
and includes the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB). It held
its first official meeting Dec. 5, 2016.
The mission of the Circle is to renew and foster “relationships between the
Catholic Church and Indigenous people in Canada” and one of its purposes is to
“assist Catholics in engagement with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
and its Calls to Action,” according to the CCCB website.
Asked whether he had any concerns about government pressure on the Circle, Archbishop
Chatlain said, “I think all of us are conscious of trying to make this not just
about politics. … We’re in this for the long term and about having long
term-healthier relationships for reconciliation and the betterment of Canadian
society as a whole.
“We want to step way back from what’s been happening,” he said, referring to
the present political context. “Overall, there has been a lot of progress
on Aboriginal issues, and on the understanding of Aboriginal culture and
languages. We want to keep that.”
As for a papal apology, the archbishop said he expects it will happen “when the
time is right.”
“We don’t just act individually for our own interests. You have to have a lot
of discussions, it’s going to take time for events, for the right time and the
right place.
“Once you start to plan details around a gathering or an event like (a papal
visit), you start to realize how many issues are at play and it’s going to take
a lot of work to do it well, a lot of work for it to be a real positive and
meaningful step.”
Archbishop Chatlain added that the bishops are “wrestling with Call to Action
#58, taking it seriously and want the response to be as healthy a response as
possible.”
Bennett had sent CCCB president Bishop Lionel Gendron a letter April 26
requesting a personal meeting to set up a meeting among the bishops and residential
school survivors.
According to the CBC, Bennett wrote: “I would be happy to facilitate a meeting
... to personally hear what an apology would mean to them and how it is crucial
to reconciliation in Canada.”
The CCCB, however, would not comment on whether Bishop Gendron had replied to
Bennett’s letter.