SOUND OFF: National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
EARLIER THIS WEEK, we recognized the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, to commemorate and reflect on the strength of the survivors, families, and communities who were forever changed by the residential school system, and especially the children who never came home.
This day coincides with Orange Shirt Day, a campaign that originated here in B.C. with survivor Phyllis Webstad. Upon her arrival at St. Joseph’s Mission Residential School in Williams Lake in 1973, Phyllis, then aged six, was stripped of her new orange shirt, and never saw it again.
The campaign that Phyllis started has spread across the country, and our B.C. government has observed it since 2017. Seeing students, neighbours, and people from all backgrounds wear orange on Sept. 30 is a reminder that at our core, British Columbians care about each other. This solidarity shows the collective desire to help end racism and violence towards Indigenous people and to proclaim loudly that “every child matters.”
Sept. 30 has taken on an increased significance as searches continue for the graves of missing children at the sites of former Indian Residential Schools and at Indian Hospitals in B.C. and across Canada. These discoveries have highlighted even more starkly the truth about the residential school system, and the continued intergenerational trauma experienced by First Nations, Métis and Inuit today.


