Tonight, I decided to start with this outstanding photo from Alessandra Tarantino, AP, as the visit to the Vatican of Canadian First Nations, Metis and Inuit representatives for healing and justice continues -- I am using the title "Walking Together" because the hashtag #WalkingTogether was also used today in several tweets about the meetings
As a Canadian delegation prepares for its final meeting with Pope Francis in the Vatican Friday, a growing chorus in Canada is hoping Francis commits to immediately remedying the Roman Catholic Church's broken compensation promises to residential school survivors.Canadian bishops announced a renewed fundraising effort last fall — $30 million over five years — and say work is well underway. But critics are skeptical.Even if that money can be raised, they say it's wrong to make the dwindling number of elderly survivors wait that long.They say that if Canadian bishops won't do it immediately, the Vatican should.Although all the full specifics of the Vatican's holdings are unknown, a tabulation of known assets puts them in the tens or possibly hundreds of billions of dollars.Survivors say the compensation money isn't for them — it's to fund addictions and mental health supports, job training, recreation, language preservation and other programs for their descendants suffering through intergenerational trauma."It affected my children, my grandchildren. So many are lost," said survivor and mental health worker Audrey Eyahpaise of the Beardy's & Okemasis Cree Nation. The survivors say the Vatican is just as responsible as the local religious orders and dioceses."This has been a struggle for many years. They've been patient. They keep hearing broken promises," said University of Saskatchewan Indigenous studies professor and Peter Ballantyne Cree Nation member Bonita Beatty."It's a hierarchy. They report up to the Vatican. So yes, he [Pope Francis] is responsible for the various arms of his government. He can't just wash his hands of it."
The First Nations delegation walks through the streets of Rome on their way 2 meet w @Pontifex re: brutality of residential schools-Catholic Church administered over 60%. Children’s lives shattered & taken. Now, survivors & ancestors stop traffic at the birthplace of colonization pic.twitter.com/gl9Gt469BT
— Brandi Morin (@Songstress28) March 31, 2022
Today the Assembly of First Nations @AFN_Updates delegation of survivors, Elders, meet the Pope, seeking an apology. Number 58 of the TRC Calls to Action. It was called for within one year of the TRC’s release nearly 7 years ago. The empty tikinagan. Our missing children . #TRC58 pic.twitter.com/8a4rElwb2l
— Tanya Talaga (@TanyaTalaga) March 31, 2022
A moving song, for children who didn't make it home, ends First Nations delegates' conference foĺlowing @Pontifex meeting. #WalkingTogether @CCCB_CECC@archedmonton pic.twitter.com/NPrhJ84M3G
— Andrew_Ehrkamp (@AndrewEhrkamp) March 31, 2022
Stories told, & justice called for
— Max FineDay (@MaxFineDay) March 31, 2022
Lots of hope from #FirstNations delegates as they leave the Vatican today
It’s up to the church, & all Catholics in Canada, to determine what happens next#cdnpoli #skpoli #Indigenous pic.twitter.com/LwCWijAll0
'I’ve been blown away': Residential school survivors showed courage, resilience and dignity this week as they faced the head of the very institution whose clergy abused them as children, says @Niigaanwewidam.
— APTN News (@APTNNews) April 1, 2022
See more on this episode of Nation to Nation: https://t.co/ccPPn1rTQS
ever come to fruition. But, I stand firm that @Pontifex can’t expect us to pay for his trip here considering the wealth of the church and more importantly it was his religion that caused so much heartache, trauma and loss. A’ho! 🪶😡💔🧡 pic.twitter.com/UAP6lbmhh4
— Indigenous Voices Matter🪶🇨🇦🇺🇦 (@Voic6Indigenous) April 1, 2022
Kúkpi7 Rosanne Casimir of Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc spoke today from Rome about the need to disclose all records & documents related to residential institutions as part of efforts toward healing and justice.
— 𝓔𝓵𝓲𝔃𝓪𝓫𝓮𝓽𝓱 𝓛𝓲𝓵𝓵𝔂 (@ChitkwesuManetu) March 31, 2022
Photo credit: Fred Cattroll #AFNVaticanVisit2022 #CTA58 #walkingtogether pic.twitter.com/mrAJ3ljIGF
As a settler, this list hit me in the gut -- it is a list of our shame and sorrow for all of us.The Missionary
— George Nelson (@gnelsonII) April 1, 2022
The Indian Agent
The RCMP Officer
The Game Warden
“The Four Horsemen of the Indigenous Apocalypse.”
- Ojibway Elder Fred Kelly, Delegation to The Vatican March 2022