dVerse — Q209 — Boarders

indian-boarding-school-01American Indian Boarding School in the 1800’s

Boarders

A string of stolen children,
scared, confused, snake,
capped with flying penguins.
Led to stools, stripped, dusted,
and shaved, paving the way:
institutional erasure.
Sacked, sad, desked, rapped,
slapped -- and worse.
So much worse. Unwilling
orphans cry for parents.
Unheard pleas echo lifetimes.

From the Law Librarians of Congress website:

In 2021, Canada passed legislation to create the federal statutory holiday called the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. Indigenous communities had been celebrating Orange Shirt Day in Canada for several years prior to the government’s holiday. The day commemorates the Indigenous children that were traditionally forced to return to boarding schools on September 30, and their families as well.

From the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition website:

Along with our relatives in Canada, we will be honoring September 30 as a National Day of Remembrance for Indian Boarding Schools. We must acknowledge the ongoing trauma of the Federal Indian Boarding School Policies so that we can heal. We are encouraging Native communities, as well as non-Native allies, to hold healing-informed events honoring boarding school survivors and call for accountability of the Federal Indian Boarding School policies.

US day of remembrance indian boarding schools

How could I be so behind the times and not know about the Canadian and U.S. Days Acknowledging the Horror of the reality of the attempted extinguishment of a race/culture of people.  Sounds inadequate to say it but I am sorry for being a citizen of a place that would do such things. 

I am today’s host of dVerse’ Quadrille Monday.  Today’s word is string.

39 Comments Add yours

  1. The kind of atrocities we heap on fellow beings is not just shocking but so deplorable.
    Thanks for sharing this, Li.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Punam, indisputable. You are welcome.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. lifelessons's avatar lifelessons says:

    So sad.. such a travesty. I see just one possible smile..the boy in the exact middle.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Thanks for taking the time to look at each child’s face. Maybe the boy liked the photographer?

      Like

  3. kim881's avatar kim881 says:

    I did not know about that, Lisa, a sad piece of history. The phrase ‘string of stolen children’ on its own is horrific, but then to be ‘stripped, dusted, and shaved’, and erased… Those poor children.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Kim, in some places, the schools were still running in 1996!!!!! EVERY member of EVERY tribe has been affected by these practices. It will take generations to heal :(

      Like

  4. Lisa this is a great poem. What happened to Indigenous Peoples in these places was horrific. In Australia there is the Stolen Generation where Indigenous children were taken from their families and forced into these homes. It was truly horrific and as you point out causes intergenerational trauma. I too feel so uncomfortable being a citizen of a country that does not adequately acknowledge their own past atrocities.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Di, I’m not sure I realized these practices were also taking place in Australia. My heart goes out to every child and family who has been subjected to and affected by what I will call “hate crimes against humanity.”

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      For sure, Roberta. It needs to be included in history classes.

      Like

  5. It’s standard practice unfortunately. Conquerors have always tried to stamp out the indigenous culture. It’s one of the particularly nasty human characteristics. People are deplorable.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      I’m tired of Man’s Way. Let’s give women a chance. Not saying we are perfect, but I KNOW we can do better than the current standard practice.

      Like

      1. Women should do better, since they are oppressed by men to a greater or lesser degree. But often they go along with it. Like turkeys voting for Christmas.

        Liked by 1 person

  6. No words today, Lisa. This is too powerful for my 2¢.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Several years ago I spent a couple of nights in a former Indian School in Pierre, SD. It was chilling to know what had gone on inside those walls. Thanks for bringing this to people’s attention.

    Like

  8. sgeoil's avatar sgeoil says:

    Your strings of action words are very haunting. Powerful writing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Heather, thank you. Their voices need to be heard. I watched a webinar not all that long ago where some of the speakers had been children in the boarding schools. They are broken by trauma, and they need to be heard.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. sgeoil's avatar sgeoil says:

        Absolutely, it is the path to reconciliation.

        Liked by 1 person

  9. Brutal and powerful. Your words snap at me like a whip.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Katie, thank you. There is no pulling back with this reality. It’s been a dirty little not-so-secret for a very long time :(

      Like

  10. Truedessa's avatar Truedessa says:

    Thank you for writing about this terrible injustice inflicted on these children. Here is the US this too was an issue. So many missing children now discovered in graves at boarding schools. Breaks my heart.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Truedessa it breaks my heart too. I know there was a school in, ironically, Mount Pleasant, Michigan, not so far from here.

      Like

  11. I had heard about the boarding schools but did not know about the days of memory… to erase a culture you always start with the children. It still happens…

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Carol C's avatar Carol C says:

    New Zealand is not without guilt as well. Presently there is a huge investigation going on for acknowledgement of harm done to the many children, both Māori and Pakeha, who were in State care, over many decades. :[

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Carol that makes my heart feel so sad.

      Like

  13. A difficult and traumatic time — talking about it is a step toward healing.

    Liked by 1 person

  14. whimsygizmo's avatar whimsygizmo says:

    So incredibly heartbreaking. And well told, Lisa.

    Liked by 1 person

  15. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    History is full of such atrocities and they mustn’t be forgotten. Unfortunately, atrocities on children continue today all over the world, including our own countries.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Dora, how we treat our most vulnerable members judges us as a species (paraphrase from someone I don’t remember who.) Children, economically disadvantaged, the elderly, the physically and emotionally fragile, the disenfranchised for various reasons, and the outright discriminated against for various reasons, all are objectified fodder for the greedy overlords.

      Like

  16. Dora's avatar dorahak says:

    History is full of such atrocities and they mustn’t be forgotten. Unfortunately, atrocities on children continue today all over the world, including our own countries.

    Liked by 1 person

  17. Carol anne's avatar Carol anne says:

    Great poem Lisa well done love it

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa or Li's avatar msjadeli says:

      Thanks so much, Carol Anne.

      Like

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