‘Old wounds’: Renewed interest over residential schools difficult for survivors
CALGARY — Flags at the Elbow River camp at the Calgary Stampede are at half mast this year to mark recent discoveries of unmarked graves at former Canadian residential school sites.
A moment of silence is observed every day in a sombre ritual.
The annual camp on the Stampede grounds was first held in 1912 to highlight the cultures of the Calgary-area Siksika, Piikani, Kainai, Tsuut’ina and Stoney Nakoda First Nations. It’s a double-edged sword this year as visitors to the camp show renewed interest about residential schools.
“Those kind of things definitely are asked about,” said Lowa Beebe, whose family has had one of the 26 teepees at the camp. “Sometimes it’s inappropriate, but the public doesn’t necessarily know.