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Updated 31 Jul, 2022 07:46am

Pope calls abuse at Canada’s church schools ‘genocide’

ROME: Pope Francis said on Saturday the decades-long abuse of indigenous schoolchildren across Canada amounted to “genocide”, as he warned upon his return to Rome that he needed to slow down his travel pace — or resign.

During his six-day “penitential pilgrimage” across Canada this week, the 85-year-old pope offered a historic apology to the First Nations, Metis and Inuit people, who have been waiting for years for such an acknowledgement from the head of the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics.

Aboard the papal plane, he used the word “genocide” to describe the decades of maltreatment and sexual abuse against Canada’s Indigenous children, who were wrenched from their families and cultures to attend state schools run by the Church.

“I didn’t say the word [in Canada] because it didn’t come to my mind, but I did describe the genocide. And I asked for forgiveness for this process which was genocide,” he told reporters.

Francis hints at ‘slowing down’ or resigning

Although Francis’s unprecedented apology was mostly welcomed across Canada, from western Alberta to Quebec and the far north, many survivors said much more needed to be done for reconciliation.

The pope, who spent much of the trip in a wheelchair due to knee pain, told reporters his international trips were numbered.

“I don’t think I can go at the same pace as I used to travel,” Francis said.

“I think that at my age and with this [knee] limitation, I have to save myself a little bit to be able to serve the Church. Or, alternatively, to think about the possibility of stepping aside,” he added.

It was not the first time Francis has said that — should his health require it — he could take a page from his predecessor Benedict XVI, who made history in 2013 by stepping down due to declining physical and mental health.

‘Evil perpetrated’

Francis wrapped up his journey on Friday in the capital of the vast northern territory of Nunavut, Iqaluit, which means “the place of many fish”.

There, he asked for forgiveness for “the evil perpetrated” by Catholics in the 139 residential schools across Canada run by the Catholic Church, where about 150,000 Indigenous children were sent from the late 1800s to the 1990s.

“I want to tell you how very sorry I am and to ask for forgiveness for the evil perpetrated by not a few Catholics who contributed to the policies of cultural assimilation,” he said.

Many were physically and sexually abused at the schools, and thousands are believed to have died of disease, malnutrition or neglect, in what a truth and reconciliation commission later called a “cultural genocide”.

Residents in Iqaluit, a community of just over 7,000 people and where small houses line the rocky ocean shore, have listened closely to the pope’s words throughout his trip.

“He did apologise, and a lot of people don’t seem to be happy with it, but he took that step to come to Nunavut... and I think that’s big,” lifelong Iqaluit resident Evie Kunuk, 47, told AFP.

Regarding his ailing knee, Francis said surgery was not an option. “Technicians say yes but there is the whole problem of anaesthesia... You don’t play around, you don’t joke with anaesthesia,” he said.

“But I’m going to try to continue to take trips and be close to people, because I believe it’s a way to serve, to be close.”

The trip to Canada was Francis’s 37th international voyage since becoming pope in 2013.

But travelling has become increasingly difficult for the pope, who has appeared fragile in recent months, and he has cancelled public appearances.

Published in Dawn, July 31st, 2022

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