Apology

The Apology of The Presbyterian Church in Canada for its role in colonization and operating residential schools for Indigenous children, which was adopted by the General Assembly in 2024, can be read by clicking the button below. Since the Apology names the extensive and intergenerational harm and trauma the schools and colonization caused, reading the Apology can be distressing. The National Indian Residential School Crisis Line is available for any former residential school students and others needing support. That help can be accessed at 1-866-925-4419.

Introduction

We, The Presbyterian Church in Canada, humbly offer this apology to the generations of Indigenous people and communities harmed by the residential schools and day schools we operated.

We originally made a Confession in 1994 for our role in operating residential schools and colonization but we have realized the inadequacy of that Confession. We apologize for our slowness and the apathy of our response. We are deeply sorry.

We acknowledge the families whose children were taken to schools without telling their families where the children were being taken and who never returned, who remain lost today. We acknowledge with grief the many unmarked graves that have been found and will be found, including at schools that we ran. We remember the children who never made it home.

We apologize for the impact of the genocide of colonization, forced assimilation and racism to which we actively contributed.

Many Survivors and intergenerational Survivors have shared very personal and traumatic experiences in the context of Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings and within the congregations, committees and governing bodies of the church. We acknowledge the strength and courage of Survivors for sharing your experiences in the schools and the heavy burdens you, your families and communities still bear. We acknowledge the pain and difficulty of sharing and reliving the truth of your lived experience.

We acknowledge that the church’s apology itself, as well as the presence of church representatives making the apology, may be triggering, evoking trauma for some by surfacing memories of devastating experiences in residential schools.

Apology

We acknowledge that Indigenous children suffered at residential schools. The Presbyterian Church in Canada ran Ahousaht Residential School in British Columbia, Alberni Residential School in British Columbia, Birtle Residential School in Manitoba, Cecilia Jeffrey Residential School in Shoal Lake, Ontario, Cecilia Jeffrey Residential School in Kenora, Ontario, Crowstand Residential School in Saskatchewan, File Hills Residential School in Saskatchewan, Muscowpetung (later known as “Lakesend”) Residential School in Saskatchewan, Portage la Prairie Residential School in Manitoba, Regina Industrial School in Saskatchewan, Round Lake Residential School in Saskatchewan and Stoney Plain Residential School in Alberta.

We apologize for taking children from their homes, parents, grandparents and communities.

We apologize for traumatizing parents and communities and taking away their rights to protect their children.

We honour and respect the languages of the land and apologize for punishing Indigenous students for speaking their traditional languages.

We apologize for attempting to eliminate Indigenous identity and Cultural and Spiritual traditions.

We apologize for the abuse Indigenous children suffered, including physical, sexual, psychological, emotional and Spiritual abuses.

We apologize for the weaponization of food that happened in the schools and for non-consensual experiments with food, nutrition and medical procedures that were conducted on children.

We apologize for the lost lives, for children who died while at residential schools – from disease, neglect, suicide, attempts to run away and from violence by teachers, staff and volunteers.

We apologize that the schools created an isolated and unsafe environment where violence was condoned and students learned violence. We regret, and are deeply sorry, that we provided conditions where students could abuse other students.

We acknowledge and apologize for the resulting loss of bloodlines, of ancestors and of people who would not grow to become Elders, the huge loss of culture and future for nations this meant.

We apologize that when children died their parents were not always informed, they were not always returned to their communities and their burial sites were sometimes unmarked or the markers were not maintained and the record of names was not kept.

We apologize for the church’s attitude of white superiority, for its assimilating policies and practices, for the racism of treating Indigenous people as less than human and for the ongoing intergenerational effects of our complicity with colonization and the schools that continue to negatively impact families and communities.

We acknowledge that this systemic racism continues to impact Indigenous people, including through: insecure housing; poverty; forced dependence on social assistance; experiencing lateral and domestic violence, in particular toward Indigenous women, girls and 2SLGBTQ people as named in the final report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. We acknowledge this has led to hopelessness, mental health crises and the tragedy of suicide, barriers to completing education and to accessing health care. We acknowledge this has led to the breakdown of family bonds that results in children taken into foster care, gang involvement, exploitation, addictions and incarceration.

We are sorry for how long it has taken for The Presbyterian Church in Canada to begin to understand the depth of harm we have caused, and we still have much to learn. For our complicity in colonization and the residential school system, we are deeply, deeply sorry.

We therefore offer five fundamental commitments:

We will continue to listen and learn from Indigenous people, leaders, Elders and Knowledge Keepers, welcoming and engaging voices from both within and beyond The Presbyterian Church in Canada.

We will continue the work of reconciliation, responding to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s 94 Calls to Action and the work of reparation that we have begun.

We will respect traditional Indigenous spiritual practices.

We will listen to and tell the truth about the past.

We will work to support Indigenous led healing and wellness initiatives and be in solidarity with Indigenous people and communities.

Confession

In 1994 The Presbyterian Church in Canada first confessed its role in colonization and operating residential schools. That Confession, which can be downloaded to read at the button below, was an initial step on the church’s ongoing journey of reconciliation. It too may be distressing to read; the National Indian Residential School Crisis Line is available for any former residential school students and others needing support. That help can be accessed at 1-866-925-4419.

In 1994, The Presbyterian Church in Canada adopted a confession recognizing the church’s role in
operating residential schools and the harm those schools caused to Indigenous children, their families
and communities.

The Holy Spirit, speaking in and through Scripture, calls The Presbyterian Church in Canada to confession.
This confession is our response to the word of God. We understand our mission and ministry in new ways in
part because of the testimony of Aboriginal peoples.

    1. We, the 120th General Assembly of The Presbyterian Church in Canada, seeking the guidance of the Spirit
      of God, and aware of our own sin and shortcomings, are called to speak to the Church we love. We do this,
      out of new understandings of our past not out of any sense of being superior to those who have gone before
      us, nor out of any sense that we would have done things differently in the same context. It is with humility
      and in great sorrow that we come before God and our Aboriginal brothers and sisters with our confession.
    2. We acknowledge that the stated policy of the Government of Canada was to assimilate Aboriginal peoples
      to the dominant culture, and that The Presbyterian Church in Canada co-operated in this policy. We
      acknowledge that the roots of the harm we have done are found in the attitudes and values of western
      European colonialism, and the assumption that what was not yet moulded in our image was to be discovered
      and exploited. As part of that policy we, with other churches, encouraged the government to ban some
      important spiritual practices through which Aboriginal peoples experienced the presence of the creator God.
      For the Church’s complicity in this policy we ask forgiveness.
    3. We recognize that there were many members of The Presbyterian Church in Canada who, in good faith, gave
      unstintingly of themselves in love and compassion for their Aboriginal brothers and sisters. We acknowledge
      their devotion and commend them for their work. We recognize that there were some who, with prophetic
      insight, were aware of the damage that was being done and protested, but their efforts were thwarted. We
      acknowledge their insight. For the times we did not support them adequately nor hear their cries for justice,
      we ask forgiveness.
    4. We confess that The Presbyterian Church in Canada presumed to know better than Aboriginal peoples what
      was needed for life. The Church said of our Aboriginal brothers and sisters, “If they could be like us, they could
      think like us, talk like us, worship like us, sing like us, and work like us, they would know God and therefore
      would have life abundant.” In our cultural arrogance we have been blind to the ways in which our own
      understanding of the Gospel has been culturally conditioned, and because of our insensitivity to Aboriginal
      cultures, we have demanded more of the Aboriginal people than the Gospel requires, and have thus
      misrepresented Jesus Christ who loves all peoples with compassionate, suffering love that all may come to God
      through him. For the Church’s presumption we ask forgiveness.
    5. We confess that, with the encouragement and assistance of the Government of Canada, The Presbyterian
      Church in Canada agreed to take the children of Aboriginal peoples from their own homes and place them in
      residential schools. In these schools, children were deprived of their traditional ways, which were replaced with
      Euro-Canadian customs that were helpful in the process of assimilation. To carry out this process, The
      Presbyterian Church in Canada used disciplinary practices which were foreign to Aboriginal peoples, and open
      to exploitation in physical and psychological punishment beyond any Christian maxim of care and discipline. In
      a setting of obedience and acquiescence there was opportunity for sexual abuse, and some were so abused.
      The effect of all this, for Aboriginal peoples, was the loss of cultural identity and the loss of a secure sense of
      self. For the Church’s insensitivity we ask forgiveness.
    6. We regret that there are those whose lives have been deeply scarred by the effects of the mission and
      ministry of The Presbyterian Church in Canada. For our Church we ask forgiveness of God. It is our prayer that
      God, who is merciful, will guide us in compassionate ways towards helping them to heal.
    7. We ask, also, for forgiveness from Aboriginal peoples. What we have heard we acknowledge. It is our hope
      that those whom we have wronged with a hurt too deep for telling will accept what we have to say. With
      God’s guidance our Church will seek opportunities to walk with Aboriginal peoples to find healing and
      wholeness together as God’s people.

For more information about the church’s history with Indigenous people and its ongoing journey of reconciliation and reparation, as well as for additional educational resources and church statements regarding reconciliation, please visit the Indigenous Justice page of the Social Action Hub here: