TORONTO (OSV News) -- According to the Catholic Civil Rights League’s database, at least 85 Catholic churches have been set ablaze or vandalized since the unproven discovery May 27, 2021, of 215 suspected unmarked graves near the former Kamloops Indian Residential School.
Police are investigating the latest victimized house of worship, St. Gabriel Catholic Mission Church in Janvier, Alberta, destroyed by fire Dec. 15. The church was not in use at the time.
Kamloops, which opened in the late 19th century, was run by the Catholic Church until the federal government took it over in the late 1960s and operated it into the late 1970s. Certain declarations were made during 2021 tying the church to the reported discovery of graves at the residential school, but the credibility of these declarations is apparently not holding up.
Over two years later, Philip Horgan, the Catholic Civil Rights League’s president and general counsel, suggested that ill-advised comments by public officials, particularly Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and speculation-driven narratives have created an environment where crimes against Catholics are societally tolerated and justified.
At least 85 Catholic churches have been set ablaze or vandalized since the unproven discovery May 27, 2021, of 215 suspected unmarked graves near the former Kamloops Indian Residential School.
“It is sad,” Horgan told The Catholic Register, a weekly newspaper based in Toronto. “If I could paraphrase the prime minister, when I think he suggested that some of the frustration by the folks giving rise to this was, quote, understandable. The reality is when we have a continued assertion of false claims of mass graves and missing children or speculation in the absence of better evidence, much of this criminal activity is likely to continue.”
On July 2, 2021, Trudeau stated, “I understand the anger that’s out there against the federal government, against institutions like the Catholic Church. It is real and it’s fully understandable, given the shameful history that we are all becoming more and more aware of and engaging ourselves to do better as Canadians.”
But Trudeau also condemned vandalism and other attacks, saying, “It is unacceptable and wrong that acts of vandalism and arson are being seen across the country, including against Catholic churches.”
Sixty-eight Christian churches were burned or defaced between June and July 2021. The crime wave ignited June 21 with the torching of Sacred Heart Mission Church in Penticton, British Columbia, and St. Gregory Mission Church, near Osoyoos, 40 minutes away.
Three days later Cowessess First Nation reported 751 unmarked graves near the Marieval Indian Residential School, and the Lower Kootenay Band claimed on June 30 that ground-penetrating radar identified 182 sets of human remains in unmarked graves outside St. Eugene’s Mission School.
Trudeau also condemned vandalism and other attacks, saying, “It is unacceptable and wrong that acts of vandalism and arson are being seen across the country, including against Catholic churches.”
Fury and judgment against the Canadian Catholic community increasingly smoldered as story after story with seemingly damning revelations got published. And each received intense mainstream media coverage. Angry graffiti messages were smeared on the outside of churches: “Colonizers,” “Killers,” “If you hurt and/or kill kids, (you) should be burned alive.” A slew of F-word epithets were among the many scrawled derogatory missives.
“We have now had at least three actual excavations,” said Horgan. “Pine Creek residential school, which is the Minegoziibe Anishinabe First Nation, where there was alleged to be 14 (unmarked gravesites) at the former Our Lady of Seven Sorrows Catholic Church, which was no longer a church in use. It is used as a community center. They did an excavation with the knowledge of the RCMP (Canadian Police), and as I recall from the press conference in late August, the Chief (Derek Nepinak) was disappointed that they didn’t find any bodies.”
Multiple publications reported Nepinak acknowledging the results “will feed into a denialist narrative of what happened at residential schools” and urged people to keep seeking the truth.
Horgan also cited that in 2021 Nova Scotia excavators did not find the remains of 16 young people who attended the Shubenacadie Residential School. He added that 34 excavations on the Charles Camsell Hospital grounds in Alberta also have uncovered zero bodies to date.
Horgan wants to be clear that he is not calling to suppress other historical wrongs or to “overlook some elements of grave concern, which most Canadians have as Canadians are fair-minded people.”
No excavations sanctioned by any government or the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation have been conducted at the alleged unmarked grave sites near Kamloops Indian Residential School where all the fury began.
Skeptics of the May 2021 claim that as many as 215 Indigenous children were buried there attempted a dig last July. Kimberly Murray, the special interlocutor for missing children and unmarked graves and burial sites, condemned these residential school “denialists.”
“Denialism is violence. Denialism is calculated. Denialism is harmful. Denialism is hate,” she said June 16.
Horgan expressed concern over Murray, the former executive director of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, calling for “legal mechanisms to address denialism, including the implementation of both civil and criminal sanctions” in her interim report last June. Some members of the government have expressed their support.
“Let’s suppress the historical record and investigations to discover the truth,” said Horgan. “This is of great concern. It’s not as if the Catholic Church has done much to address the hurt and pain. The pope came to Canada in 2022, as you know, and they continue to engage the fundraising effort to try and address these things.
“But when it comes to the actual underlying story, we’re still met with ‘most kids went to residential school,’” he continued. “No. Of the 150,000 recognized by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, it is roughly 30 or 32% of Indigenous children over a 100-year span. A slightly higher number actually went to day schools either on the reserve or in a community and the others didn’t go to school. It is not as if the RCMP was picking kids up and taking them to schools. Parents were signing kids up.”
Horgan wants to be clear that he is not calling to suppress other historical wrongs or to “overlook some elements of grave concern, which most Canadians have as Canadians are fair-minded people.”
“But this effort to portray these instances of missing children as an effort of cultural or other form of genocide I think is a huge overreach and is a slur against a lot of very good people who did incredible work over the past century,” said Horgan. “While we may have the franchise on turning the other cheek, I think on the other side we also have to try and ensure there is a better telling of the actual facts.”