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The public was informed in the summer of 2021 that a mass grave of Native American children had been discovered near the grounds of the Kamloops Indian Residential School, a Catholic boarding school that forced the assimilation of Native American youth.But no bodies had been recovered. Instead, the conclusion that the remains of 215 children — some as young as three — had been buried at the site was substantiated only by what the New York Times referred to as “ground-penetrating radar.”...A follow-up report in The Washington Post was even more shocking. It claimed that there were indications that a site near the former Marieval Indian Residential School in Saskatchewan was home to 751 unmarked graves.The claim was reported as the second announcement “in less than a month as the country reckons with the devastating legacy of one of the darkest chapters of its history.”...Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called the two findings a “shameful reminder of the systemic racism, discrimination, and injustice that Indigenous peoples have faced — and continue to face — in this country.”It didn’t take long after the report on the alleged grave site at Kamloops before chaos ensued. A whopping 55 Canadian churches were the targets of vandalism or arson in the month following the first report. Of the sum, 21 churches had been lit on fire, with several (primarily Catholic) churches being burnt to the ground. Only one arrest was made in connection to the attacks.......Here’s an overview of each alleged site of mass graves, complete with both the original claims and the findings to date:Kamloops Indian Residential School:...Findings: The anomalies found by the radar were not graves but rather appears to be a septic field.Marieval Indian Residential School: ...Findings: The grave at Marieval was not a mass grave for Indigenous children, but a Catholic Cemetery.Our Lady of Seven Sorrows Roman Catholic Church:...Findings: An excavation conducted by an archaeological team at the University of Brandon found “no evidence of human remains.”Despite the lack of evidence for mass graves of Native American children at residential schools, those who’ve questioned the claims have been blasted as “denialists.” An article from the state-affiliated Canadian Broadcasting Corporation warned that “denialism is the last step of genocide.”
A hoax costs taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars and appears to incite arson attacks against dozens of churches....In 2021, ... Canadian outlets picked up a story too sensational not to be true:Hundreds of indigenous First Nations children had been buried in unmarked graves at residential schools run by the Catholic Church in British Columbia.The Kamloops Indian Band sent around a press release that "confirmed" it. The statement claimed the remains of 215 children had been found with the help of an expert using ground-penetrating radar....Even now, Canada's biggest daily paper, The Globe and Mail, phrases its retraction in cagey terms."There has been no public confirmation of the discovery of any human remains," the paper conceded on May 30....The Globe and Mail editorial, titled "There is no reconciliation without truth," is a masterpiece of embarrassed equivocation, lamenting conditions for First Nations children at Canada's residential schools and even insisting the absence of bodies "does not mean children did not die there" before finally, eight paragraphs into the story, taking a smidgen of responsibility:"The media, including The Globe and Mail, did not initially scrutinize, much less challenge" the story, the editorial board concedes."The initial headlines and stories in the media simply stated as fact that the remains of 215 children had been found. Many of those early stories, including in this newspaper, made references to 'mass graves'," ......The narrative comes first — the facts must follow.This time they didn't, but next time?The narrative isn't going away just because its showcase story has been debunked.The consequences of the media hype aren't going away, either:Canadian taxpayers footed the bill to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars — real money in U.S. dollars, too — for First Nations groups to investigate "soil anomalies."The government simply doesn't know where the money went.