B.C. school once slated to be built on cemetery offers reconciliation hope: advocate
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — The relocation of the construction of a secondary school in New Westminster, B.C., once planned to be built over a cemetery not used in a century, is an example of reconciliation in action, an advocate says.
New Westminster Secondary School officially opened Thursday after three years of construction.
The former school, which was declared seismically unsafe, sits on top of a cemetery used by the Indigenous, Chinese and Sikh communities.Hospital patients from a psychiatric asylum, the indigent andexecuted prisoners were also buried there from the mid-1800s to 1920.
Bill Chu, the chief executive officer of the Canadians for Reconciliation Society, said he hopes the school’s opening and a proposed memorial for the old site where the cemetery sits will start a conversation about reconciliation.