Indigenous groups in B.C. get mental health funding for residential school survivors
VANCOUVER — Colette Trudeau learned the truth about her family’s heritage at age eight, and that’s when she began to understand that pretending to be French-Canadian was a way for her great-grandparents to keep their children from being taken away to residential school.
The revelation came from an Aboriginal education support worker at Trudeau’s elementary school in Maple Ridge, B.C., with a suggestion that the little girl go home and speak with her father, who sent her to her grandmother, who resisted the request for answers.
Hilda Trudeau, who died five years ago at age 83, finally relented as the family worked to reclaim its Métis heritage, which Colette Trudeau, now 36, has passed on to her own daughter as she works with a group that is supporting those who did end up suffering abuse at residential schools.
On Monday, the B.C. government announced that Métis Nation BC is one of three Indigenous groups to receive part of $1.5 million in funding to provide for the mental health needs of residential school survivors and their families.