Formats disponibles :
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Publisher:Fernwood Publishing, 2015
Details:
- Author: Knockwood, IsabelleContributor: Atlantic Publishers Marketing AssociationDate:Created2015Summary:
In the 1880s, through an amendment to the Indian Act of 1876, the government of Canada began to require all Aboriginal children to attend schools administered by churches. Separating these children from their families, removing them from their communities and destroying Aboriginal culture by denying them the right to speak Indigenous languages and perform native spiritual ceremonies, these residential schools were explicitly developed to assimilate Aboriginal peoples into Canadian culture and erase their existence as a people. Daring to break the code of silence imposed on Aboriginal students, residential school survivor Isabelle Knockwood offers the firsthand experiences of forty-two survivors of the Shubenacadie Indian Residential School. In their own words, these former students remember their first day of residential schooling, the years of inner transformation, and harsh punishments for speaking their own language or engaging in Indigenous customs.
Sujets: Knockwood, Isabelle, 1931- | Nova Scotia--Shubenacadie | Residential schools | Nova Scotia | Indigenous peoples--North America--Social conditions | Mi'kmaq | Nova Scotia--Shubenacadie River Valley | Abused Indigenous childrenOriginal Publisher: Halifax, NS, Fernwood PublishingLanguage(s): EnglishISBN: 9781552667569Collection(s)/Series: Atlantic Canadian: Read Atlantic