First Nations twins say they felt segregated in cold portable classrooms at their elementary school - Action News
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Manitoba

First Nations twins say they felt segregated in cold portable classrooms at their elementary school

Waywayseecappo First Nation children say they werent allowed to use the front door and had to enter the school through the back to be taught in portable classrooms known as the huts.

Former students allege they were abused at school in Rossburn, Man., are seeking compensation

Twins Michael and Michelle Brandon went to Rossburn Elementary School. They say their experience was traumatizing. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Warning: This story contains distressing details.

Twins Michael and Michelle Brandon say they endured abuse and felt singled out and treated differently as First Nations students at Rossburn Elementary School and they, along with dozens of other students from Waywayseecappo First Nation, want an apology and compensation from the federal government.

Younger students from Waywayseecappo First Nation were not taught in the main building; their learning happened in portable classrooms behind the school, according to the Brandons.

"We called [them] 'the huts,'" Michael said.

They also say they weren't allowed to use the school's front door they remember First Nations children having to enter through the back.

Members of Waywayseecappo First Nation in Manitoba saywhen they went to Rossburn Elementary School in the late 1960s and early '70s, they were separated from other students. They alsoallege they faced daily abuse by staff members and now want their pain and suffering recognized, as it was for Indigenous federal day school students.

Former First Nation students share stories of segregation and abuse at Rossburn School

2 years ago
Duration 2:20
Members of Waywayseecappo First Nation in Manitoba who went to Rossburn School in the 60s and 70s say they were segregated from other students and faced daily abuse from staff. Former students from Rossburn School do not qualify for the federal government's settlement to compensate day school attendees, because the school wasn't run by the federal government or by the church.

Waywayseecappo First Nation, about 280 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg near the Saskatchewan border, signed an agreement with the federal government in 1965 to have its children educated in Rossburn, less than 10 kilometres away.

The government paid $99,973 to the school district of Rossburn to build classrooms for the additional students. In the agreement, both parties agreed to "ensure there will be no segregation in the schools by race or colour," says a document found by Valley of the Birdtail authors Andrew Stobo Sniderman and Douglas Sanderson (Amo Binashii).

Michelle and Michael Brandon, right, stand with other former students from Waywayseecappo First Nation where the huts used to be at the back of Rossburn Elementary School. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Michelle Brandon remembers otherwise. She said she only remembers First Nation students in the huts.

Michael and Michelle were six when they started at Rossburn School. They were taught in the huts in grades 2 to 4 in the 1970s before they transitioned into the main building with other students.

"I just remember the Native kids going through to the dark hallway [to the huts]," Michelle said.

The portable classrooms were built behind the elementary school in 1968.

A tender published on May 26, 1968, in the Rossburn Review sought someone to build three units for the elementary school. The ad specified the units must be winterized and meet regulations set by the Manitoba Department of Education and Fire Commission, and health regulations of the province.

The Brandons say the huts were poorly insulated.

"We always had to wear a jacket," said Michelle, 51. "It was freezing cold in there."

Her family couldn't afford high-quality winter wear, so she didn't have a jacket that kept her warm enough at school. She now wonders if part of the reason she felt ill at school was because she was always cold.

Children from Waywayseecappo were sent to federally run residential and day schools in Manitoba before 1961, then transitioned to the provincial school system.

The Indian or federal day school system operated from the 1860s to the 1990s, and attempted to assimilate Indigenous children by erasing their culture. Unlike residential school students, day school attendees were allowed to go home at night, but many suffered abuse at the government and church-run schools during the day.

This is the door at the back of the school that the Brandons say they had to use to get into the building. (Travis Golby/CBC)

In 2019, a class-action lawsuit to compensate survivors for harms they suffered while attending federally operated Indian day schools was settled with the federal government.

Michael Brandon tried to apply for compensation, but was told he wasn't eligible because Rossburn Elementary was not a federally run day school and wasn't listed in the settlement agreement.

At the time, the public school was operated by the Pelly Trail School Division.

"I just wish we were part of the Indian settlement," Michael said. "All of us endured physical abuse."

He said his experience was that of a day school, just under a different name. He believes he is entitled to compensation and an apology from the federal government.

Michelle, however, said she doesn't want to be compensated.

"I just want my story to be heard," she said.

Rossburn Elementary School is still operating today. It was under Pelly Trail School Division until 2002, when it merged with Birdtail River School Division to become Park West School Division. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Like the Brandons, many former students haven't talked openly about their times in the huts until recently. They said it was only after the Truth and Reconciliation Commission made its calls to action that they started to feel like they could share their experiences.

Tina Cote, 52, said she recalls an adult saying, "these huts are being put there for you Indians."

She remembers both First Nations children and local children in her classes, and provided CBC with a class photo.

Cote remembers feeling humiliated after a teacher forced her to sit in the garbage can because she was chewing gum.

"She made a hat with a word written on it: Dunce," Cote said.

"I cried right through the whole class. And, you know, they were laughing at me."

Cote said the abuse she faced was emotional and physical.

Tina Cote, middle, and her class pose for a photo at Christmastime in the huts. (Submitted by Tina Cote)

Others say they experienced sexual abuse.

Arlene Cook, now 65, said she was inappropriately touched during gym class.

"We had to put these outfits on. They were one piece and looked like a bathing suit. Most of us native kids didn't have bathing suits and we didn't dress like that in public," Cook said. "The male gym teacher would put his hand, like, in front of your body and the back on your bum supposed to be helping."

She said it was a regular occurrence and she saw other girls being touched the same way.

"An apology would be good," she said. "It would help with the hurt that I went through. It would lessen my feelings."

Arlene Cook, a former student of Rossburn Elementary School, says she wants an apology from the federal government. (Travis Golby/CBC)

CBC News sent a series of questions to the federal government, including asking whether it had records of federal funding being used to build portable classrooms may have been used to Indigenous students.

A spokesperson for Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada said the school was provincially run and documents related to school history are in possession of the province, so further research would be needed to answer the questions.

"Addressing historical claims related to harms committed against Indigenous children is a crucial step towards renewing our relationships with Indigenous Peoples," the spokesperson said.

A provincial government spokesperson said school divisions are responsible for administering public schools.

"Portable classrooms, also informally known as 'huts' in some cases, have been and continue to be used in schools where needed to manage increasing enrolments. Manitoba Education and Early Childhood Learning is not aware of their use for segregation of Indigenous students at Rossburn School," the spokesperson said.

Rossburn Elementary School is run by the Park West School Division, which was established when the Pelly Trail and Birdtail River school divisions merged.

Superintendent Stephen David said in an email that allegations of sexual and physical abuse have not been reported to the division since it was established in 2002. He said he does not know if reports were made to the Pelly Trail School Division before the merger.

David encourages anyone who experienced abuse to make a report to the division.

Gilbert Longclaws, 57, also went to Rossburn Elementary and said he keeps in touch with former students from Waywayseecappo, and they share similar stories of school abuse.

"They told me what happened to them," he said. "There's a lot of people that went there, a lot of people got abused."

Longclaws said he remembers his classmates being primarily First Nation students, but said there was "the odd" white student in the huts.

Longclaws recently reconnected with Mary-Ann Mitchell-Pellett, who he said was one of the few white classmates he remembers.

Mary-Ann Mitchell-Pellett says she'll never forget seeing Gilbert Longclaws returning to class with a bleeding face that looked like it had been strapped. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Mitchell-Pellett said she remembers her classes in the huts being integrated and all students being subjected to corporal punishment, but said First Nations students received worse treatment.

She said she saw Longclaws return to class with a teacher, and something had happened to his face.

"It looked like he was strapped across the face, and his face was bleeding," she said.

"What I saw with Gilbert, I've never seen a white person treated like that," she said. "That has always haunted me."

Longclaws wants to know why the government is not taking responsibility for Rossburn School.

"Why aren't we included when we were abused?" Longclaws said. "We're not lying about what happened. This really did happen."

Longclaws wants compensation so he can give the money to his three grandchildren.

"They just lost their dad a year ago," he said. "If I were given money, it [would go to] all my grandchildren to help them with their future."

Gilbert Longclaws from Waywayseecappo First Nation holds up a drawing of what he remembers the huts were like. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Support is available for anyone affected by their experience at residential schools or by the latest reports.

A national Indian Residential School Crisis Line has been set up to provide support for former students and those affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by calling the 24-hour national crisis line: 1-866-925-4419.

Mental health counselling and crisis support is also available to all Indigenous people across Canada, 24 hours a day, seven days a week through the Hope for Wellness hotline at 1-855-242-3310 or by online chat at www.hopeforwellness.ca.

Clarifications

  • This story has been edited to clarify that allegations of mistreatment and segregation at the school are based on the memories of students interviewed. It also clarifies that Michael and Michelle Brandon were taught in huts in grades 2 to 4 before they transitioned into the school's main building, and that former students recalled being in classes with both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students.
    Nov 09, 2022 4:03 PM CT