this
In Kamloops, Not One Body Has Been Found
PROFESSOR JACQUES ROUILLARD
After seven months of recrimination and denunciation, where are the remains of the children buried at the Kamloops Indian Residential School?
The Canadian Press has just honoured the children of residential schools as the "Person of the Year 2021." The huge media story last summer grew out of the scanning of part of the site in the British Columbia interior where the school operated from 1890 to 1978. The "discovery" was first reported last May 27 by Tk'emlúps te secwépemc First Nation Chief Rosanne Casimir after an anthropologist, Sarah Beaulieu, used ground-penetrating radar in a search for the remains of children alleged by some to be buried there. She is a young anthropologist, an instructor in Anthropology and Sociology at the University of the Fraser Valley since 2018. Her preliminary report is actually based on depressions and abnormalities in the soil of an apple orchard near the school—not on exhumed remains. According to Chief Casimir, these "missing children" represent "undocumented deaths." Their presence, she says, has long been "knowledge" in the community and "some were as young as three years old."[1]
…
In Kamloops, Not One Body Has Been Found
https://www.catholiceducation.org/en/culture/politics/in-kamloops-not-one-body-has-been-found.html
related:
The ‘solemn purpose’ of the Pope’s penitential pilgrimage
Indigenous people in Canada eagerly await Pope Francis' message of repentance and reconciliation as he begins his "penitential pilgrimage" in Canada.
https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2022-07/the-solemn-purpose-of-the-pope-s-penitential-pilgrimage.html
smudging the narrative.
yawn. when they say "look here!", look there.