Canadian call to Queen Elizabeth II: Apologize!

Canadian call to Queen Elizabeth II Apologize

According to a Canadian poll, the majority of the public is demanding that the Queen of England apologize for the tragedy their Indigenous children have experienced in boarding church schools.

Canadians support Queen Elizabeth II’s call for an apology for the Church of England’s role in Canada’s boarding school system, according to a poll conducted by the public opinion polling firm Nanos Research.

The poll asked, “As the monarch of Canada and leader of the Church of England, do you urge Queen Elizabeth II to apologize for her role in Canada’s church boarding school system?” While 43 percent of the participants fully supported the question, 19 percent partially supported it.

While 30 percent of the participants expressed their opinions against this question, 8 percent stated that they had no opinion.

Representatives of indigenous groups living in Canada, after meeting with Pope Pope Francis last April, called for Queen Elizabeth II to apologize for the tragedy in boarding church schools.

THE PAPAP APPROVED

Pope Francis, the spiritual leader of the Catholics, apologized and pardoned the Canadian natives.

Pope Pope Francis met with the delegation of Canadian indigenous groups “Metis”, “Inuit” and “First Nations” in the Vatican in April and announced that he apologized and apologized after their meeting that lasted for about a week.

The spiritual leader of the Catholic world and Pope Francis will visit Canada between 24-30 July 2022.

Pope Pope Francis will meet with indigenous people in Edmonton, Quebec and Iqaluit during his visit to Canada.

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THE FIRST GRAVES WERE DISCOVERED IN MAY 2021

Unregistered child graves in the garden of the old boarding church school in Canada came to the fore for the first time on May 29, 2021, with the remains of 215 children found in the garden of the school in Kamloops, British Columbia province.

On June 24, 2021, graves containing the remains of 751 children’s bodies, which were not officially recorded, were discovered in the garden of the Marieval Boarding School in Saskatchewan.

In the province of British Columbia, the former St. On June 30, 2021, undeclared graves containing the remains of 182 children were discovered near the Eugene Mission School.

The indigenous tribe of Penelakut, one of the Southern Gulf Islands of the same state, also announced on July 12, 2021 that more than 160 “undocumented and unmarked” graves were found in the area belonging to the Kuper Boarding School.

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St. in the Williams Lake First Nation region of British Columbia. The teams, which scanned 14 hectares of the 470-hectare area of ​​the Joseph’s Mission Boarding Church School with surface radar, announced that 93 new graves had been discovered.

In the studies carried out in the Keeseekose First Nation region of Saskatchewan province, 42 in the Fort Pelly Boarding Church School region, St. 12 unnamed graves were found in the area of ​​Philip’s Boarding School.

As a result of the searches conducted in 4 different regions of the Gordon’s Boarding Church School in the province of Saskatchewan in Canada, 14 burial places that are not in the official records were identified.

THE BIGGEST CHILD ABUSE IN CANADA HISTORY

The first of the church boarding schools, considered “the site of the greatest child abuse in Canadian history”, opened in the early 1880s and the last was closed in 1996.

In these schools, where more than 150,000 local children were forcibly taken from their families and settled, most of the children were abused by priests, nuns and other teachers with physical, sexual and psychological violence.

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In addition to the abuses recorded by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which was established in the country in 2010, it was determined that medical experiments were carried out on some children.

The Canadian Federal Government has formally apologized to the victims for what happened at the boarding church schools, where thousands of children died as a result of starvation, cold and disease. (AA)

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