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Keeper N Me: The Effects Of Residential Schools On Aboriginal People

Decent Essays

The effects of residential schools on Aboriginal people in the novel Keeper’N Me
It is a dishonourable fact that residential schools precluded First Nations children from the opportunity of embracing their own culture and traditions, and disintegrated the foundations of family circles by taking their children away. The novel Keeper’N Me replicates the detrimental outcomes of the forced separation of children from an Ojibway family in the context of a sad but elegant story.
The residential school system became prominent in Canada after the passage of the Indian Act in 1876 and was funded by the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development (“A History of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada”). The original goal of this school system was to educate First Nations children about Canadian tradition and Christianity, as the …show more content…

While the initial objective was for the schools to help integrate First Nations children into the mainstream society they lived in, this integration clearly became an attempt at conversion. The children were removed from their families for extended durations, attempting to ensure Canadian-Christian upbringing. The residential schools original goal drastically changed, with their disgraceful policy regarding forbidding Aboriginal children from any kind of acknowledgement and recognition of their native language and culture. There are numerous reports of physical, psychological and sexual abuse experienced by Indigenous children in residential schools and painful consequences that in most cases last a lifetime (Hanson, E.).
The drastic cultural impact of residential schools on First Nations people has been extensive, as it is mentioned in the novel Keepr’n Me by Richard Wagamese. Keeper’s statement in this book, “Only thing they did was create a whole new kinda Indyun. We used to

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