Government, churches begin to address assimilationist education policies
June 1900, Phoenix. (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration)
Red Cloud Indian School is taking the lead among Christian-run schools in coming to terms with its assimilationist past.
The Jesuits have given Red Cloud a $20,000 grant to help in the work,
including conducting searches with ground-penetrating radar for
unmarked graves, and have allocated $50,000 to hire an archivist for one
year to examine the order’s boarding school history at its archives in
St. Louis.
School leaders are also working with tribal representatives about
searching the school grounds on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South
Dakota for remains of students who died there.
“The Catholic Church needs to recognize that honesty, being
forthright and vulnerable are far more powerful and more healing than
being reticent, restrictive and closed,” said Maka Black Elk, Oglala
Lakota, executive director for Truth and Healing at Red Cloud Indian
School.
Churches are joining the U.S. federal government in facing the
often-brutal history of Native boarding schools, which forced children
from their families into schools where they were often abused, underfed
and used as virtual slave labor. Some died there without ever going
home.
U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland (Laguna) launched the Federal Boarding School Initiative in June directing the agency to prepare a report detailing historical records of schools operated by the U.S. government.
The Initiative, however, has no authority over Christian
denominations, which operated about one-third of the approximately 400
Indian boarding schools in the U.S.
With more than 100 schools, various Catholic orders operated most of
the Christian Indian boarding schools, some long before President
Ulyssis Grant’s 1869 Peace Policy formally created the federal school
system.
Christians began operating boarding schools as early as the 1600s
when Jesuits and Puritans separated Native children from their families
in order to receive “civilizing” Christian instruction.
Christian missionaries were paid by the federal government to operate
Indian schools beginning in 1819 with the Indian Civilization Fund Act.
But the heyday of federal Indian boarding schools came under Grant’s
policy.
Indian Country Today reached out to leadership in the
Catholic, Methodist, Presbyterian, Episcopal and Quaker churches,
denominations that operated most of the schools, asking what they are
doing now to address the history.
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