As Pope’s apology echoes, U.S. Indigenous boarding-school probe follows Canada’s lead
WASHINGTON — On the heels of a historic moment of healing for Indigenous Peoples in Canada, their counterparts in the United States are anxiously anticipating a federal report on residential schools — commissioned by one of their own — that’s fuelling hope for the start of a similar reckoning.
Deb Haaland ordered the Indian Boarding School Initiative last June, shortly after becoming the first Indigenous secretary of the interior in U.S. history, and just days after a B.C. First Nation announced the grim discovery of human remains at a former residential school.
The results of that probe, which is expected to detail the scope and depth of the program in the U.S., are due any day now. When it lands, striking words from Pope Francis — “I want to say to you with all my heart: I am very sorry” — will still be reverberating.
Indigenous leaders in Canada had long sought the pontiff’s personal apology as a gesture of reconciliation for the generations of harm done to children who were forced to attend schools run across the country by the Roman Catholic Church for more than a century.