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Pontiac Native Community holds ceremony for Reconciliation Day

Pontiac Native Community holds ceremony for Reconciliation Day

30 September 2021 à 12:00 am

Updated on 13 September 2022 à 11:20 am

The Pontiac Native Community hosted a ceremony to mark the first National Truth and Reconciliation Day at their recently constructed healing garden in Mansfield.

A group of around 20 gathered around a fire and began with a smudging ceremony. Attendees were given a chance to speak about the day and the importance of remembering the damage caused to Indigenous children and their families by Canada’s residential schools.

One of the Truth and Reconciliation commission’s calls to action was the creation of a statutory holiday for remembrance, which parliament established as September 30 back in June. Pontiac Native Community President Richer Lévesque said that he was glad the government had created an official holiday to honour the lost, the survivors and their communities. He added that the provinces should follow suit and recognize the day as well.

Lévesque said that he was pleased with the turnout to the ceremony.

The event concluded with a song followed by a 215 seconds of silence, a reference to the remains of 215 children in unmarked graves that were uncovered this May outside a former residential school near Kamloops B.C.

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