Virtual reality teaching about N.S. group home abuse transforms shame into respect
HALIFAX — Fifteen-year-old Christian Ofume stands with Tony Smith and discusses the virtual reality education he’s just received, detailing how, as children, Smith and other residents of a Halifax group home were forced to beat one another to entertain staff.
“It makes me shake my head …. They’re just kids, and they’re having to struggle through so much,” Ofume told the 59-year-old former resident of the home last week.
The Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children, which opened in 1921, was the site of alleged mistreatment and abuse from the 1940s until the early 1980s.
It became the focus of an RCMP investigation that was eventually dropped in 2012 after police said they had difficulties corroborating the allegations of sexual and physical abuse. However, class-action lawsuits launched by the former residents against the home and the provincial government ended in settlements totalling $34 million, followed by a public apology in 2014 from the premier.