麻豆传媒AV

Skip to content

FSIN seeking $25 million from Catholic Church

The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations is calling for the Roman Catholic Church to follow through with a promise to provide $25 million to Residential Schools survivors.
Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations
Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) called on the federal government and Catholic Church to release residential school records, and said the FSIN will be demanding a full, independent and public inquiry into the deaths of First Nations children in Canada. Zoom screenshot

The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations is calling for the Roman Catholic Church to follow through with a promise to provide $25 million to Residential Schools survivors.

In a news release issued Thursday, FSIN stated that the Church had agreed to raise the money as part of the Indian Residential School Survivor Agreement to support survivors and their families. The FSIN cited media reports that found the Catholic Church in Saskatoon region has only raised $34,650.聽 Nationally, it is around $4 million, also well short of the $25 million.

鈥淭housands of First Nations children were victims of emotional, physical and sexual abuse at these church-run residential schools,鈥 said FSIN Chief Bobby Cameron in a news release. 鈥淭hey were starved, shamed, and beaten for speaking their languages and stripped of their culture, traditions, and identity.聽 These wrongs were committed by the Catholic Church and our survivors deserve a proper apology and compensation for what was done to them; not broken promises鈥

鈥淔or Catholics to raise millions to build multiple multi-million-dollar cathedrals and raise only $34,650 or $0.30 per survivor is shameful.聽 Just as shameful as the acts committed against these little children by the priests, nuns, and institution they worship.聽 If they can鈥檛 raise it in their houses of worship here, it should come from the richest organization in the world, The Vatican.鈥澛

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks