Buried Secrets: America’s Indian Boarding Schools Part 1
Nov 23, 2024
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Mary Annette Pember, a national correspondent for ICT and a citizen of the Red Cliff Band of Ojibwe, shares her extensive reporting on Indian boarding schools and their painful legacy. She talks about Justin Pourier’s haunting discovery of unmarked graves at Red Cloud Indian School and the broader implications for numerous institutions across the country. The discussions highlight emotional testimonies of survivors, the cultural erasure faced by Indigenous communities, and the urgent need for truth and reconciliation in the wake of historical trauma.
The episode reveals the traumatic legacy of Indian boarding schools, emphasizing the forced assimilation efforts that stripped Native children of their cultural identity.
Justin Pourier's discovery of unmarked graves at Red Cloud School highlights the urgent need for truth and healing within Native communities affected by these injustices.
Deep dives
The Legacy of Indian Boarding Schools
The episode examines the historical context of Indian boarding schools, particularly focusing on the Red Cloud Indian School in South Dakota. For over a century, these institutions operated under a federal initiative aimed at assimilation, stripping Native children of their culture, language, and identity. Many Indigenous children were forcibly removed from their families, resulting in severe trauma and loss within communities. The episode emphasizes the federal government's recognition of the impact of these policies, which led to intergenerational trauma and ongoing struggles faced by Indigenous peoples today.
Personal Accounts and Hidden Histories
The narrative includes a powerful account from Justin Porior, a former maintenance worker who discovered what he believed were unmarked graves at the Red Cloud School nearly 30 years prior. His experience serves as a catalyst for revisiting this painful history as he seeks closure for the community. The episode features testimonies from survivors like Ramona Klein and Basil Braveheart, who recount the physical and emotional violations they endured during their time at boarding schools. These personal stories illuminate the depth of suffering experienced by Native families and serve as reminders of the urgent need for truth and healing.
Federal Initiatives and Apologies
Deb Haaland, Secretary of the Interior and a member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe, initiated federal investigations into the Indian boarding school legacy to uncover the truths behind these institutions. This includes the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative, which aims to document the historical atrocities and their lasting impacts on Native communities. President Biden's formal apology to Native peoples represents a significant step towards acknowledging past injustices and healing. The episode highlights the importance of ongoing conversations about reparations and accountability for the suffering caused by both the government and religious institutions.
Community Efforts for Truth and Healing
Red Cloud School has begun its own truth and healing efforts as part of a broader community initiative to confront its history. Activities such as ground-penetrating radar demonstrations aim to uncover unmarked graves and identify the magnitude of losses suffered by Indigenous children. The episode underscores the divisions within the community regarding the school’s past, with some insisting on a deeper investigation into the potential cover-ups of child deaths. Activists within the community advocate for comprehensive reparations and insist that genuine healing cannot occur without confronting the truth of historical injustices.
In the early 1990s, Justin Pourier was a maintenance man at Red Cloud Indian School, a Catholic school on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. One day, he says he stumbled upon small graves in the school’s basement. For nearly 30 years, Pourier would be haunted by what he saw and told no one except his wife.
“Those are Native children down there…hopefully their spirit was able to travel on to whatever is beyond this world,” Pourier says. In 2022, he urged school officials to search the basement for the graves.
The hunt for unmarked graves of Native children isn't happening just at Red Cloud, now called Maȟpíya Lúta. It’s one of more than 400 Indian boarding schools across the country that were part of a program designed by the federal government to “kill the Indian and save the man”—those were the actual words of one of the architects of the plan to destroy Native culture. In a historic first this fall, President Joe Biden apologized to Native Americans on behalf of the United States for the country’s past Indian boarding school policies.
This week on Reveal, in a two-part collaboration with ICT (formerly Indian Country Today), we expose the painful legacy of boarding schools for Native children with ICT reporter Mary Annette Pember, a citizen of the Red Cliff Band of Ojibwe. She’s been writing about these schools for more than two decades.
This is a rebroadcast of an episode that originally aired in October 2022.