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Residential Schools: Aggressive Assimilation

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Residential Schools: A Case of Aggressive Assimilation
The Canadian government assumed that it was accountable for the care and education of Aboriginal children. The Residential School system was developed to ensure the assimilation of every Indigenous child in Canada. These schools were terribly unsafe for children and exhibited horrible living conditions, including abuse, malnutrition and isolation. Conditions in residential schools continue to negatively impact communities, generations later, contributing to violence, alcoholism and surprising statistics seen from Aboriginal communities. The policy behind the Canadian Residential Schools highlights the injustice done to Indigenous people, resulting in long term impacts on the community to …show more content…

The schools disrupted the transferal of cultural values and practices from the elders to the children, who were not allowed to practice their traditions and values and were forbidden from speaking their language. Therefore when students returned home, they felt like they did not belong. They could not communicate with their family and had not learned the skills to help them. The children were taught to be ashamed of their roots and heritage. So after they had left the schools, they felt like they did not belong anywhere, not in their own community or in the European Society of Canada. This was caused by being brought up away from any civilization. The skills taught in the schools and the education provided was below the required standard. They also had a disadvantage over other kids born to Canadian parents, who learned to speak English as soon as they could talk, unlike Aboriginal children, who started to learn at the age of 7, so many found it hard to operate in an urban Society. Survivors often had difficulty living productive lives. As they left school, they had quickly realized that they did not fit into their own community and did not have enough skills to fit into a Society that they were promised at the schools. They were unable to go to university and found that no employer would employ them. “The lessons learned in childhood are often repeated in adulthood as those experiences deeply influence behaviour”(Long Term Impact, survivingthepast.ca). Therefore, children who endured abuse in school as children took that abuse with them into their adult lives. Children who were abused in the Schools, carried that into the lives of their children. This abuse is seen carried on, through multiple generations. Parenting and family life is learned at home through looking at examples, so children who lived in Residential School did not have the chance to live

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