Thunder Bay

Nishnawbe Aski Nation Oshkaatisak Council won't acknowledge Canada Day, will raise awareness instead

Nishnawbe Aski Nation's Oshkaatisak (All Young People's) Council has announced it won't celebrate Canada Day this year, and will instead focus on raising awareness about residential schools.

Youth council in northwestern Ontario says members will wear orange, place down tobacco

Shoes, teddy bears and orange shirts were placed on the front steps of the B.C. Legislature earlier this month in memory of the children at a Kamloops residential school. Nishnawbe Aski Nation's Oshkaatisak (All Young People’s) Council said Tuesday it won't acknowledge Canada Day this year, and members will wear orange shirts and raise awareness about residential schools on July 1. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

Nishnawbe Aski Nation's Oshkaatisak (All Young People's) Council has announced it won't acknowledge Canada Day this year, and will instead focus on raising awareness about residential schools.

In a media release Tuesday, the council said its members will wear orange shirts on July 1.

"The Oshkaatisak Council is deeply saddened that the recent discovery of the final resting places of innocent youth at IRS [Indian Residential School] sites in Canada and the United States now numbers over a thousand and is expected to rise in coming months," council member Mallory Solomon, of Constance Lake First Nation, said in a statement. "All children who are recovered, and those children who have yet to be recovered, matter and they will always matter.

"The children deserve to be found and brought back home."

Indigenous communities recently announced that 751 unmarked graves had been detected near the former Marieval Indian Residential School in Saskatchewan, as well as what are believed to be the remains of 215 children at the site of a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C.

The council will "place down tobacco for the next few days in honour of the children who have been located," the release says.

Support is available for anyone affected by their experience at residential schools, and those who are triggered by these reports.

A national Indian Residential School Crisis Line has been set up to provide support for residential school survivors and others affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by calling the 24-hour national crisis line: 1-866-925-4419.