After apology in Alberta, First Nations want Pope to say sorry on Quebec soil
MONTREAL — As Pope Francis’s visit to Canada shifts east, Indigenous leaders say their communities deserve to hear him on Quebec soil beg forgiveness for the sins of the Catholic Church in that province.
An apology from the pope in front of an audience in Quebec would be a meaningful gesture after the pontiff apologized Monday on the grounds of the former Ermineskin Indian Residential School at Maskwacis, Alta., said Mandy Gull-Masty, grand chief of the Cree Nation.
“I think it’s important because we have survivors at every event and we want them to hear these words in person,” Gull-Masty said in a recent interview. “So, I think it would be really key to share that and acknowledge that in both parts of his journey here in Canada.”
Expectations for the pope’s visit, she said, vary from nation to nation in Quebec. Most federally funded residential schools in the province opened in the 1950s, and the last one in shuttered in 1991.