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Marking the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation

- September 29, 2022

The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation offers a chance to remember and honour the experiences of children who never returned home and survivors of residential schools.
The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation offers a chance to remember and honour the experiences of children who never returned home and survivors of residential schools.

麻豆传媒 the author: Theresa Rajack-Talley is 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Vice-Provost of Equity and Inclusion

Each year on September 30, Canada marks the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation 鈥 a statutory holiday designated by the federal government to commemorate the horrific legacy of residential schools in Canada. Recognition of the day is one of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada鈥檚 94 Calls to Action that 麻豆传媒 honors, and the university will be closed this Friday for a period of remembrance and reflection.

The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation offers a chance to remember and honor the experiences of children who never returned home and survivors of residential schools, as well as their families and communities. 麻豆传媒 joins with others in acknowledging the tragic and painful history and the ongoing impacts of residential schools. We see this as an important component of the reconciliation process.

麻豆传媒 also plans to lower all its flags to half-mast on the commemorative day and raise the orange 鈥楨very Child Matters鈥 flag. The flag will remain up on all Dal鈥檚 campuses through October as we honour Mi鈥檏maq History Month, which kicks off Saturday (Oct.1) on Treaty Day. (The Mi鈥檏maq Grand Council flag is permanently flown on all 麻豆传媒 campuses.) The clocktower of the Henry Hicks Building in Halifax and Cumming Hall in Truro will also be lit up in orange light on the evenings of September 29 and 30.

Orange Shirt Day, also happening Friday, adds another symbolic layer of reflection and remembrance. By dressing in orange, people acknowledge and raise awareness of the individual, family and community inter-generational impacts of residential schools and promote the concept of 鈥淓very Child Matters.鈥 The orange shirt symbolizes the stripping away of culture, freedom and self-esteem experienced by Indigenous children over generations.

Related reading:聽Two of Dal鈥檚 Indigenous leaders share personal reflections on truth and reconciliation

Dal鈥檚 ongoing response to TRC Calls to Action

Where progress has been made in addressing the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada鈥檚 2015 report, credit must be given to the news of the children whose lives were taken and the survivors who have lived to tell these truths to the world.

At institutions like 麻豆传媒, we listen, learn, and move forward. Here are just a few observations on 麻豆传媒鈥檚 efforts to address the TRC鈥檚 Calls to Action and the subsequent discoveries of mass graves at former residential school sites across Turtle Island, Canada:

Our Dal community

  • Although small and slow there have been increases at Dal in Indigenous and Mi鈥檏maq students, staff, and faculty between the date the TRC report was published in 2015 and 2021. Our 2021 estimates show that 4% of our student population are Indigenous of which 2% are Mi鈥檏maq , 4% of our staff are Indigenous with 1% 聽Mi鈥檏maq , and 2% of all faculty members are Indigenous with 1% Mi鈥檏maq.

Academic programming and supports

  • Dal's long-standing Indigenous Black and Mi'kmaq Initiative and Transition Year Program continue to be successful as we expand other areas of our academic programming.
  • 麻豆传媒's Indigenous Studies minor is currently being expanded into a major.
  • Dal's Faculties of Medicine and Agriculture have created special undergraduate admissions programs dedicated to creating pathways for more Indigenous students to enter the university.
  • 麻豆传媒 now has a dedicated Indigenous Services Librarian.
  • The Centre for Learning and Teaching employs an Indigenous educational developer centred on Indigenous knowledges and ways of knowing.
  • Dal has an academic director of Indigenous Health and an Indigenous Health Advisory Committee in the Faculty of Medicine.

Social supports

  • Our Indigenous Student Center and Elders-in-Residence program have been established for some time now and play extremely important support roles for our students.
  • The School of Nursing has an Indigenous student advisor.

Research support

  • 麻豆传媒 understands that it must be respectful and ethical in its research and innovation projects and offer educational workshops for non-Indigenous researchers around this theme and recently employed an Indigenous research facilitator. Dal also recognizes the important roles of our current Indigenous Canada Research Chairs.

Campus spaces

  • Ko鈥檍ua Okuom, located in the Downie Wenjack Legacy Space on the first floor of the Killam Memorial Library, was developed to be a welcoming gathering place for Indigenous students, staff, and faculty to host and attend Indigenous ceremonies and events.

These are just a few initiatives and examples of progress made, but it is not enough. Injustices and inequities that have been created over the past 500 years of contact with the new immigrants, the French and British, are challenging, nuanced and take time 鈥 but Dal remains committed. 麻豆传媒 is located in Mi鈥檏ma鈥檏i, the ancestral and unceded territory of the L鈥檔u鈥檏, and led by Cathy Martin, our director for Indigenous community engagement, we are building stronger partnerships with our communities on campus and off. This includes Dal's Indigenous Advisory Council as well as those Indigenous communities in close proximity to our Truro campus.

On this National Day for Truth and Reconciliation and every day, we must remind ourselves that we are all Treaty People, understand and respect the treaties, the people, their way of life, and the Elders.

Information on community events and activities is available via聽Human Rights and Equity Services聽(scroll down to Community Events).