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Indian Assimilation

Decent Essays

Following Indigenous peoples first encounters with Europeans the two-row wampum belt, which was meant to represent the harmonious relationship developed in North America with European settlers was created. This agreement began the first of many treaties that would later serve as the foundation in which Indigenous peoples would unknowingly take their first steps to beginning their long history of exploitation, assimilation and powerlessness within Canada. Through critically analyzing chapter 5 “the Indian Act and Indian Affairs in Canada” within the “Ways of Knowing” textbook, I will explore the intent of the 1876 Indian Act and its following repercussions on the Indigenous peoples it affected. With the end of the war of 1812, and Indigenous …show more content…

With assimilation always in mind, residential schools became sources of extremely painful and traumatic experiences. Every facet of residential school life was meant to “kill the Indian within the child”. Upon arriving children were not allowed to leave, their hair was cut, their Indigenous names were replaced with more English names and their traditional clothing was replaced with work clothes (118). In most residential schools children were banned from speaking their own language and if they were caught they were often severely beaten. Children were removed sometimes forcibly from far off communities to provide enough distance to discourage children from feeling (118). Residential schools were more like concentration camps than schools in which children lived in appalling conditions, ate poorly made and poorly nutrient foods and died by the hundreds. The residential school system would leave a legacy of sexual abuse and scaring on the estimated 150,000 children who attended them, leaving many defeated, uneducated, and unable to re-enter their communities (119). Other examples of the aftereffects caused by the Indian Act can be seen in the ways that Indigenous peoples lost their land, their identity, their hunting rights, encountered verbal, mental, physical and sexual abuse, broke families apart, reduced indigenous knowledge and practicing of oral traditions, losing the right to govern themselves and have agency, becoming a stereotyped and racialized group, Indigenous cultures and traditions becoming criminalized, hundreds of Indigenous woman either killed and missing, the creation of the department of Indian Affairs, Bill C-31 and inadequate reserves and resources allocated to Indigenous peoples. All of this has been the outcome of

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