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They Called Me Number One: Secrets and Survival at an Indian Residential School

Amazon.com Price:  $7.16 (as of 01/05/2019 20:48 PST- Details)

Description

Xat’sull Chief Bev Sellars spent her childhood in a church-run residential school whose aim it was once to “civilize” Native children through Christian teachings, forced separation from circle of relatives and culture, and discipline. As well as, beginning at the age of five, Sellars was once isolated for two years at Coqualeetza Indian Turberculosis Hospital in Sardis, British Columbia, nearly six hours’ drive from home. The trauma of these experiences has reverberated all through her life.

The first full-length memoir to be published out of St. Joseph’s Mission at Williams Lake, BC, Sellars tells of three generations of women who attended the school, interweaving the personal histories of her grandmother and her mother with her own. She tells of hunger, forced labour, and physical beatings, steadily with a leather strap, and also of the demand for conformity in a culturally alien institution where children were confined and denigrated for failure to be White and Roman Catholic.

Like Native children forced by law to attend schools across Canada and the US, Sellars and other students of St. Joseph’s Mission were allowed home only for two months in the summertime and for two weeks at Christmas. The remainder of the year they lived, worked, and studied at the school. St. Joseph’s Mission is the site of the controversial and well-publicized sex-related offences of Bishop Hubert O’Connor, which took place all through Sellars’s student days, between 1962 and 1967, when O’Connor was once the school principal. After the school’s closure, those who had been forced to attend came from surrounding reserves and smashed windows, tore doors and cabinets from the wall, and broke anything which may be broken. Overnight their anger turned a site of shameful memory into a pile of rubble.

In this frank and poignant memoir, Sellars breaks her silence about the institution’s lasting effects, and eloquently articulates her own path to healing.


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