How one residential school survivor hopes a new school course will build compassion
Charlotte Morris spent 3 years at Shubenacadie Residential School
A P.E.I. woman who was forced into the residential school system hopes a new course that focuses on this piece of Canada's history will help build understanding in Island students.
All kids in Grade 9 now take the course Practicing Reconciliation Through Education in social studies.
"It would be good for understanding and also a big eye-opening," said Charlotte Morris, who spent three years at Shubenacadie Residential School in Nova Scotia in the 1960s starting when she was seven years old.
"I think it's important for the children to know what's going on, and I know Grade Niners ... they're not too young to spring this on them."
Many unaware of this dark history
Morris, who is now 60, says much of the violence and abuse that went on in residential schools has been hidden, and it's important to raise that awareness in young people.
"I'm sure a lot of them will be in shock because they're not going to realize, hey this took place," said Morris, who now lives in Birch Hill.
"They'll probably find it hard to believe."
I was lost. My identity was gone. You know, I just didn't feel like a person.— Charlotte Morris
Morris still has vivid memories of the day she and her older sister, Margaret, and younger brother, Harry, were put in a car and driven away from their home on Lennox Island, P.E.I.
"Didn't have a clue what was going on. No one had told us where we were going."
Around 120 First Nations children would have been at Shubenacadie when Morris and her siblings were there. Morris and her sister are two of 26 survivors from P.E.I. who are still living.
Lost language, family ties
Morris remembers how big the place felt that first day, counting the flights of stairs she had to climb to get to the dormitory, and how scary the nuns seemed.
"You know, afraid of them because we were with strangers. Like, we didn't say a word. We just cried."
After that first day, Morris and her sister weren't allowed any contact with their little brother. The only time girls and boys saw each other was during mealtimes in the large dining hall, but even then Morris said the boys were on one side and the girls on the other.
"You couldn't even say, 'Hi,' to them. You couldn't even talk to them. You weren't allowed to do that."
Every night trying to fall asleep, Morris held out hope she would get to go home, but it would be a year before that happened, when Morris and her siblings went home for the summer.
Took 20 years to begin recovery
Morris only spent three years at the school, but said it took two decades for her to start to recover emotionally from the treatment she and other students faced while they were there, like being forced to stay outside in bad weather.
"It could be freezing cold out there, it could be raining and they won't let you in, even if you knock on the door to come in. They'd keep the door locked."
Morris remembers feeling helpless, crouched at the door, watching girls cry.
But there was one small silver lining — outside, the girls could speak to each other in Mi'kmaq, something they would be severely punished for when the nuns were around.
Home life crumbled
When the school closed three years later, Morris headed home to Lennox Island, but the damage from those years had already been done.
We've been told it goes through seven generations before the effects disappear. As this happened during most of our lifetimes, we still have a long way to go.— Tammy MacDonald, historical researcher with the Mi'kmaq Confederacy of Prince Edward Island
"I was lost. My identity was gone. You know, I just didn't feel like a person. I wasn't able to function on my own."
Home wasn't the same either. Her parents had split up and alcohol had taken over their lives, said Morris.
"So we didn't have a happy home to go to. We were free, but we weren't free in a happy way."
Ten years after a bad first marriage that included drinking and drugs, Morris finally sought counseling at the age of 29. She said unraveling that emotional damage took time.
'I had no parenting skills'
"For a while, I didn't know what a normal life should be. I didn't know what I was supposed to be feeling."
Morris admits her emotional struggles have had an impact on her four children as well.
"I didn't have an idea how to bring up kids," said Morris.
"I had no parenting skills because I didn't learn anything when I was a teenager, cause, like I said, my parents were into their addictions, in their drinking, and not able to be there for us at a young age. So I didn't have a clue what I was supposed to do."
A generational echo
Tammy MacDonald, a historical researcher with the Mi'kmaq Confederacy of Prince Edward Island who was a consultant for the Grade 9 course, said the emotional effects of residential school take generations to heal.
"We've been told it goes through seven generations before the effects disappear. As this happened during most of our lifetimes, we still have a long way to go," said MacDonald.
"It's heartbreaking."
We're not dealing with our problems. We keep it inside us. We're too scared to talk about it because that abuse is still there ... So it's good that they know this.— Charlotte Morris
She hopes the knowledge shared in the course will help students understand what First Nations peoples are still going through today. That's Morris's hope as well.
"That way they will understand why some of us behave in a certain way. Like we can't reach out, like we're not trained to reach out. We're not dealing with our problems. We keep it inside us. We're too scared to talk about it because that abuse is still there," said Morris.
"So it's good that they know this."
Morris said she still hasn't completely recovered from what she went through, but she's still striving to get there.