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Vol. 8
No. 6
YOUR INDEPENDENT LOCAL NEWSPAPER - LANARK, NORTH LEEDS & GRENVILLE
JUNE 2021
Local woman organizes Indigenous children’s memorial in Carleton Place Regional - Janelle Labelle editorial@pdgmedia.ca Following the news that a mass grave containing the bodies of 215 Indigenous children was found at the former Residential school in Kamloops, BC, there has been an outpouring of grief across the country. Carleton Place woman Olivia Salvatori created an Indigenous Children’s Memorial with 215 teddy bears to illuminate the enormity of this tragedy. After reading about the mass grave on the news, Salvatori wrestled with trying to picture what a group of 215 children looks like. She saw a post on Facebook asking people to put a teddy bear on their front porch to honour the children who lost their lives. She thought this would be a beautiful tribute, but it wouldn’t help people to put into perspective what a huge number 215 is. Salvatori posted on local Facebook groups asking for donations of teddy bears. She contacted Carmela Ciocio, the principal of Caldwell Street Public School, and asked if she could put 215 teddy bears in the school yard and take photos so people could better visualize the size of this tragedy. Ciocio agreed, and suggested the bears be placed on the fence and left for 215 hours; one hour per child found, for passersby to see. All day Monday, teddy bears poured in. More than 215 were brought to Salvatori’s home and to the schoolyard. Catherine Townsend and Randy Swatt volunteered to help. Peggy Sue Brushett, an Indigenous woman whose children attended Caldwell St School,
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volunteered to smudge and wear a ribbon shirt. They arranged 215 bears in the school field, spaced 6 feet apart as they would be standing if they were in the yard today. “The visual impact was so powerful,” Salvatori noted. Residents who came to bring bears or just stand and honour the lives lost were brought to tears as they rounded the corner. “Some people asked me why I was doing this here because of bodies that were found in BC. But this happened all across Canada. This [memorial] can open a dialogue and allow people to be educated, to adjust what they think they know.” After the photos and smudging ceremony, volunteers and neighbours participated in hanging the bears on the fence. Salvatori left the remaining bears beside the fence with a sign inviting citizens to hang a bear in honour of missing and murdered Indigenous children. “We know that there are many more than 215 children missing,” Salvatori commented. She is deeply grateful that her idea snowballed into this larger memorial. “This is a place where anyone in the area can go and pay their respects in recognition of what has occurred.” Salvatori said she is “just a mom. It really had an impact on me as a mom.” Particularly shocking is the fact that this is not the first mass grave found at Residential schools. Seven mass graves were found in 2008. This is, however, the first one to catch national attention: Indigenous families and their allies know it will not be the last.
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TOP: A line of bears stretched along the fence has a huge visual impact. Photo credit: Submitted by Donna Deliva. BOTTOM LEFT: Olivia Salvatori and her son Sehrin with 100 donated teddy bears on Monday afternoon. Photo credit: Submitted by Olivia Salvatori. BOTTOM RIGHT: Residents are invited to hang a stuffie and pay their respects for the children who were murdered. Photo credit: Submitted by Shannon McLellan.
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