Sunday, September 30, 2018

Orange Shirt Day a reminder that Every Child Matters

Courtesy of the Government of BC:

Editor's Note -- Phyllis Webstad also serves as the Cariboo Regional District Area 'D' Alternate Director

The Government of British Columbia has proclaimed Sunday, Sept. 30, 2018, as Orange Shirt Day, to honour and remember Indian residential school survivors and their families.

Orange Shirt Day is held annually on Sept. 30, a time of year when Indigenous children were removed from their homes and taken to residential schools.

“On Orange Shirt Day, British Columbians recognize a shameful period in our shared history,” said BC Premier John Horgan. “We honour the resilience and bravery of residential school survivors, their families and communities. We acknowledge the trauma and abuse inflicted on generations of Indigenous peoples. Today, and every day, we commit to working together with Indigenous peoples to heal and build a better future.”

“I am humbled and honoured that the Province of British Columbia has proclaimed Sept. 30 as Orange Shirt Day,” said Phyllis Webstad, president, Orange Shirt Society. “This campaign has grown far beyond the wildest dream of the six-year-old girl I was when I lost my orange shirt. This recognition is another step on our road to reconciliation, and the incredible response the campaign has generated across the country confirms my belief that that Canadians and First Nations are willing and ready to take this journey together.”

The campaign is founded on the stories of residential school survivor Webstad and her experiences at St. Joseph Mission residential school in Williams Lake, in 1973, at the age of six. The orange shirt she wore on her first day was given to her by her grandmother. It was stripped from her upon arrival at the school, never to be seen again. Today that shirt has become a symbol for a dark period in B.C.'s history and is at the heart of the Orange Shirt Day campaign.

Over the course of more than a century, approximately 150,000 Indigenous children were separated from their families and their communities and forced to attend one of 139 official residential schools across Canada.

"The land has changed because people stopped working together,” said Eddy Charlie, residential school survivor and co-organizer of Victoria’s Orange Shirt Day. “Freedom to hear our voices comes from working together. If we have a common goal, we create a safe place where healing can begin. Orange Shirt Day gives us that opportunity to see one path together."

Scott Fraser, Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation, and Rob Fleming, Minister of Education, on behalf of Premier Horgan, will join MLAs and members of the Victoria Orange Shirt Day committee at the city’s event Sunday, Sept. 30, at noon at Centennial Square, to mark Orange Shirt Day and speak to the proclamation.

“Until we face our dark colonial past and create a climate where people can have those conversations, where we acknowledge the history, acknowledge the pain and find ways to support moving forward together, true reconciliation is beyond our grasp,” said Fraser. “Orange Shirt Day is a time for healing and to act on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action to redress the legacy of residential schools.”

Orange Shirt Day is an event promoted through the Orange Shirt Society, a non-profit organization in Williams Lake.

Quick Facts:

* Every Sept. 30, Orange Shirt Day sends a message that Every Child Matters.

* Orange Shirt Day is a legacy of the St. Joseph Mission Residential School Commemoration Project and Reunion events that took place in Williams Lake in May 2013.

* These events were designed to commemorate the residential school experience, to witness and honour the healing journey of the survivors and their families, and to commit to the ongoing process of reconciliation.

* The intent of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action are to redress the legacy of residential schools and advance the process of Canadian reconciliation.
Orange Shirt Day opens the door to global conversation on all aspects of residential schools. It is an opportunity to create meaningful discussion about the effects of the schools and the legacy they have left behind; a discussion to create bridges for reconciliation.

* Indian residential schools were funded by the federal government’s Department of Indian Affairs and administered by Christian churches. The last residential school closed in Saskatchewan in 1996.

Learn More:

For more information on Orange Shirt Day, visit: http://www.orangeshirtday.org/

Orange Shirt Day 2017:

https://www.facebook.com/BCProvincialGovernment/videos/1904204109597872/

Eddy Charlie shares his story of survival for Orange Shirt Day: https://youtu.be/vzAqaTjNLQU

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