Canada’s National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation says their records show at least 24 students passed away while attending St. Anne’s Indian Residential School throughout its 70 years in operation.
In memory of former St. Anne’s students:
- Abraham Moses Nakogee
- Alexandra Chookomoolin
- Anna Aitel
- Antoine Wisk
- Charles Hunter (Fort Albany)
- Emile Anishinape
- Emilien Aitel
- Gabriel Carpenter
- Imelda Edwards
- Jennie Kostachin
- John Kioki
- Joseph Metat
- Josephine Chookomoolin
- Madeline Sutherland
- Margaret Sutherland
- Matheiu Kamascatishishit
- Michael Sutherland
- Michel Matinas
- Raphael Katakwapit
- Raphael Tomykatie
- Sabeth Sutherland
- Sabeth Wabano
- Simeon Ashnipinishkam
- Therese Okitigo
Additional photos of the school throughout its history can be found through Algoma University HERE.
In 1992, Former Chief of Fort Albany First Nation, Edmund
Metatawabin, presented evidence to Ontario’s provincial police about
abuse at the former school, prompting a six-year investigation.
The OPP’s work led to seven former St. Anne’s teachers and
administrators being arrested in 1998, with 156 survivors receiving some
form of compensation by 2004 – two years before the historic Indian
Residential Schools Settlement of 2006.
Documents from the investigation were released in 2014 after an Ontario Superior Court judge ordered the federal government to disclose them to survivors and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
But by that time, the federal government had already redacted over
12,000 documents from the record – which denied many survivors any
amount of compensation.
Still, the documents that were released by Ottawa revealed the use of a
homemade electric chair being used between the 1950s and 1960s, with a
variety of reports of disturbing physical and sexual abuse such as
beatings, rancid food, disappearances and much more.
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