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Pope’s Canada trip to make amends for Indigenous school scandal

Pope Francis has called his visit to Canada a 'penitential pilgrimage' of 'healing and reconciliation'
Pope Francis has called his visit to Canada a 'penitential pilgrimage' of 'healing and reconciliation' - Copyright AFP/File Filippo MONTEFORTE
Pope Francis has called his visit to Canada a 'penitential pilgrimage' of 'healing and reconciliation' - Copyright AFP/File Filippo MONTEFORTE
Clement MELKI with Montreal bureau

Pope Francis heads to Canada on Sunday for a chance to personally apologise to Indigenous survivors of abuse committed over a span of decades at residential schools run by the Catholic Church.

The head of the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics will be met at Edmonton’s international airport by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after the flight from Rome. 

The 10-hour flight constitutes the longest since 2019 for the 85-year-old pope, who has been suffering from knee pain that has forced him to use a cane or wheelchair in recent outings. 

Francis’ Canada visit — which he has called a “penitential pilgrimage” of “healing and reconciliation” — is primarily to apologise to survivors for the Church’s role in the scandal that a national truth and reconciliation commission has called “cultural genocide”. 

From the late 1800s to the 1990s, Canada’s government sent about 150,000 First Nations, Metis and Inuit children into 139 residential schools run by the Church, where they were cut off from their families, language and culture. 

Many were physically and sexually abused by headmasters and teachers.

Thousands of children are believed to have died of disease, malnutrition or neglect. 

Since May 2021, more than 1,300 unmarked graves have been discovered at the sites of the former schools. 

A delegation of Indigenous peoples travelled to the Vatican in April and met with the pope — a precursor to Francis’ six-day trip. 

– ‘Too late’ –

In the community of Maskwacis, some 100 kilometres (62 miles) south of Edmonton, the pope will address an estimated crowd of 15,000 expected to include former students from across the country. 

“I would like a lot of people to come,” said Charlotte Roan, 44, interviewed by AFP in June. The member of the Ermineskin Cree Nation said she wanted people to come “to hear that it wasn’t made up”. 

Others see the pope’s visit as too little too late, including Linda McGilvery with the Saddle Lake Cree Nation near Saint Paul, about 200 kilometres east of Edmonton.  

“I wouldn’t go out of my way to see him,” said the 68-year-old. 

“For me it’s kind of too late, because a lot of the people suffered, and the priests and the nuns have now passed on.” 

McGilvery spent eight years of her childhood in one of the schools, from age 6 to 13. 

“Being in the residential school I lost a lot of my culture, my ancestry. That’s many years of loss,” she told AFP. 

After a mass before tens of thousands of faithful in Edmonton on Tuesday, Francis will head northwest to an important pilgrimage site, the Lac Sainte Anne. 

Following a visit to Quebec City from July 27-29, he will end his trip in Iqaluit, home to the largest Inuit population in Canada, where he will meet with former residential school students, before returning to Italy. 

Francis is the second pope to visit Canada, after John Paul II, who visited three times (1984, 1987 and 2002). 

Some 44 percent of Canada’s population is Catholic. 

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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