National Indigenous leaders plan Vatican visit to call for long-awaited papal apology
Discussions with bishops happening to request residential school apology, return of records and cultural items
National Indigenous leaders are planning a visit to the Vatican this November to seek a papal apology for the Catholic Church's role in running residential schools and other Canadian institutions that Indigenous students were forced to attend.
National Chief Perry Bellegarde of the Assembly of First Nations and Vice-President David Chartrand of the Métis National Council told CBC News their organizations are working with the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops to send delegations.
"It's a very big part of healing," Bellegarde said. "Our missing children have not received the same dignity nor respect in death or in life that every human being deserves."
The leaders said the trip to the Vatican was supposed to have happened by now, but the pandemic pushed those plans back.
Now, with the discovery of what are believed to be the unmarked burial sites of children's remains adjacent to a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C., there's a greater push to secure a meeting with Pope Francis.
The leaders want to invite the Pope to Canada to make an official apology directly to survivors and families.
They also intend to ask the Pope to instruct the church to release all records relating to residential schools, as well as Indigenous items seized from Canada that the Vatican may hold in its vaults.
Watch | Indigenous leaders plan to visit Pope