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Residential Schools Case Study

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The Reality of Residential Schools
The Indian Act of 1876 placed restrictions on the education of Aboriginal children, which ultimately devastated the First Nation culture (Florence 37). The Canadian Government saw relations with Aboriginal people as the “Indian Problem” and they wanted to get rid of the First Nation people’s culture, identity and individual nations. In the 1880s the Government began to establish and operate a system of residential schools which were a central element to their policy. The intent was the assimilation of Aboriginal children into the working classes of Euro-Canadian culture. The children were forced to attend the schools and were segregated from the influence of their family, community, and culture. “Between 1882 and 1969, residential schools operated in Canada through arrangements between the Government of Canada and the Roman Catholic, Angelicin, Methodist, United and Presbyterian churches” (Stonefish 16). Around 100,000 Aboriginal children between the age of 6 to 16 attended one of the 100 schools at its peak in 1957. Residential schools devastated First Nations culture because they exposed them to all forms of abuse and stripped them of their language and family.
Traditional language has helped shape the Indigenous culture in Canada for thousands of years. Unfortunately, preserving the traditional languages has been seriously jeopardized in the past 150. As Watson Foundry states, languages in Canada’s Aboriginal communities have been on a

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