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The Genocide of the Native Culture

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The Genocide of the Native Culture The thinking of a dominant white society and the savageness of Native culture is the background of the on-going struggle against cultural genocide of First Nations people all across Canada. The first European settlers in Canada viewed the inhabiting First Nations people as uncivilized, and they felt that they needed to be educated in their “civilized” ways. This thinking started the cultural genocide of the Native culture. This paper will focus on the ways in which Native people have been pushed towards the dominating Euro-Canadian ways through the 60s scoop, residential schools, reproduction rights for Native women, and the Indian Act. The 60s scoop is the adoption of First Nation and Metis children …show more content…

The children were taught to follow and not question the belief in the moral and intellectual superiority of white culture, and to reject all aspects of their native lives (Claes & Clifton, 1998). The government 's missions for the Native children ranged from assimilation, to make Indians indistinguishable from Europeans, segregation, to education native people and restrict their life in their own communities, and integration, for native people to be absorbed into mainstream institutions and society (Claes & Clifton, 1998). Although the goals of the residential schools changed over time, one thing always stayed the same, the genocide of the Native culture. There has already been steps to help these children that faced the abuse of the residential schools. Prime Minister Stephen Harper approved the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement and a total of $1.9 billion in payments to former students (Anderson, 2012). Also, the Agreement promised $60 million for a five-year Truth and Reconciliation Commission and $145 million for commemoration and healing events (Residential Schools Settlement, 2008). Another important element was the public apology to the victims of residential schools by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, on 11 June 2008. Although these are huge steps to try and fix the mistake that the government made with these residential schools, some of the

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