Day school's demolition helps heal trauma for Gitanyow First Nation - Action News
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British Columbia

Day school's demolition helps heal trauma for Gitanyow First Nation

Wanda Good studied at the day school for Indigenous children in the late 1970s. She conducted a small ceremony at the school on Wednesday to call back what she believes the students' spirits trapped by abuse.

After years of disrepair and memories of abuse, old school in northwest B.C. is coming down this week

Students in Grades 1 to 3 at Kitwancool Indian Day School on Gitanyow First Nation reserve in 1968. The school's demolition this week represents a new chapter in the lives of the former students who experienced physical and psychological abuse while there. (Gail Evans)

To Wanda Good and other members ofGitanyow,the demolition of the Kitwancool Indian Day School's building this weekrepresents a new chapter in their lives, healing the trauma they suffered duringa racist education at the federally operated institution.

On Wednesday, Good conducted a small ceremony at the school she attended from 1972 to 1980, to call back what she believes are the spirits of students that may still linger inside the building after years of abuse.

"We believe that we are our ancestors reincarnated," she said. "The part of the spirit of that child remains where there was a trauma."

Located on the Gitanyow reserve, a remote Indigenous communityabout 260 kilometres northeast of Prince Rupert, B.C.,Kitwancool is among the 700 Indian day schools operated across Canada from the 1860s to 1990s. Thepurpose of the schools was to assimilate Indigenous children by eradicating their native languages and cultures. These schools were publicly funded and often had religious affiliations.

Wanda Good is now the manager of the Gyets Gitxsan Indian Residential School program, which provides support services to Indian Day School survivors. (CBC)

Years of trauma in Kitwancool day school

Kitwancool day school was established by Prince Rupert's Anglican Diocese of Caledonia in 1938, after a representative wroteto the federal Department of Indian Affairs that local First Nation people needed education in English. It was housed in a log cabin owned by Gitanyow chief Walter Derrick until its formal campus was built in 1949.

But the education that Good and hundreds of other Indigenous children received is more a torture than enlightenment.

"I did experience and witnessed lots of strapping, punching, pulling ears," said Good. "We actually had music teachers that would teach us these very racist songs that we would have to sing."

"We were not allowed to speak our language in the classroom. The children were strapped every time someone said a Gitxsan word."

In its letter to federal Department of Indian Affairs in 1937, Prince Rupert's Anglican Diocese of Caledonia discussed the need to build Kitwancool Indian Day School to educate Indigenous children in English. (Library and Archives Canada)

The nightmare ended in 1986, when the school was closed and students were transferred to the Gitanyow Independent School that currently provides kindergarten to Grade 6 education to about 60 children.

The day school premises were repurposed into the Gitanyow Band's administration office before turning into a gas stationseveral years ago. In light of the building's disrepair, the band council decided to demolish it and has plans to erect a new gas bar at the same location.

Good is now the manager of theGyets GitxsanIndian residential school program, which is funded by the First Nations Health Authority to provide support services to Indian Day School survivors. She said many former students of Kitwancool day school have applied for the federal Indian Day School Settlement program, which offers compensation between $10,000 and $200,000 based on abuse suffered.

The log cabin that housed the Kitwancool Indian Day School. (Submitted by Wanda Good)

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With files from Matt Allen and Kanhehs:io Deer