MUN archeology team offering to help Indigenous communities investigate unmarked graves - Action News
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MUN archeology team offering to help Indigenous communities investigate unmarked graves

Memorial University professor Lisa Rankin says the team is made up of eight people of different skill sets, with archeologists, historical researchers and community representatives.

'We're just in the background ready to help,' says professor

Lisa Rankin, research chair of Indigenous community archeology at Memorial University, is part of a working group offering help and support to Indigenous communities who want to investigate unmarked graves in Newfoundland and Labrador. (Mike Simms/CBC)

WARNING: This story contains details some readers may find distressing.

A newly formed working group within Memorial University's archeology department is offering help to Indigenous communities that wantto investigate potential unmarked graves in Newfoundland and Labrador.

After the discovery of human remains in unmarked gravesat formerresidential schools in other parts of Canada, archeology professor Lisa Rankin said sheknew questions would likely arise in local Indigenous communities about possible sitesin this province.

Rankin, MUN'sresearch chair of Indigenous community archeology,said she and her colleagues have begun working with Indigenous groups to see how they could be of service.

"We're just working through that now," Rankin said last week. "We're here to help them if they want our help."

Rankin said the team is made up of eight people with different skill sets, from archeologists and historical researchers to community representatives from the Innu Nation and the NunatuKavut community council.

She said the early stages of planning have been working to make sure proper supports for research are in place and making information available to groups who may want to do research of their own.

The archeology team would use ground-penetrating radar to investigate potential unmarked grave sites, according to archeology professor Vaughan Grimes. (Mike Simms/CBC)

"We don't want to say, 'Hey, we're ready to go.'If the communities decide that they want to know more information about a known cemetery where there may be graves, for example, we're ready and we will help them," she said.

"These are huge community questions. They need to be talked through in the communities and understood in the communities, and I believe that's a process that is going on now. We're just in the background ready to help."

Do you have information about residential schools? Email your tips to WhereAreThey@cbc.ca

That conversation has already started for Bryn Wood, NunatKavut'sdirector of research, education and culture. He said preliminary backgroundresearch is underway, and the next step is to consult community members.

"It's important for us to be involved and to make sure that we collaborate with people who are familiar with best practices to support our communities and others in efforts on finding lost children," he said.

The Nunatsiavut government is not participating in the working group at this time. Members of Nunatsiavutand theInnu Nation were unavailable tocomment about the working group.

N.L. results could differ from other parts of Canada

Rankin saideach community's needs could be different, since each had different experiences.

She said that could also translate to results that are different from other parts of Canada.In Newfoundland and Labrador, research concernsformer residential schools students, and Indigenous people who died inhospitalin Newfoundland whose bodies were never returned.

"The more significant issue for Indigenous communities in Newfoundland and Labrador may belost loved ones that went to hospital care in the south in, say, St. Anthony, for example, and never came home," Rankin said.

The Nunatsiavut government participatesin a program called Nanilavut, an Inuktitut word meaning "let's find them." Nanilavut's researchers seekthe remains and burial sites of Inuit sent south for tuberculosis treatment in the 1940s, '50s and '60s.

The working group's work is still in the early stages but it hopes to have information available to Indigenous communities in the coming days. (Mike Simms/CBC)

Newfoundland and Labrador had five residential schools, the last of which closedin 1980. Given the amount of people living with memories of the schools, Rankin said, research efforts and record-keeping could be different in this province.

"There may be better records about anyone who lost their life at the schools, and about where those people might be," she said.

"It's only a generation away that this had long-term, lasting impacts for our membership and other communities," added Wood.

"So we were really just scratching the surface, I think. It's time to make sure that this work is done in a respectful and meaningful way, using best practices. And I think this committee is a good step in that direction," he said.

High-tech tools

If a request to investigate anunmarked grave was made, the working group couldusetechnology called ground-penetrating radarto begin its search, according to MUN associate archeology professor Vaughan Grimes.

The radar, which Grimes says is about the size of a lawnmower,works as a non-invasive technique that can determine changes withinsoil. It can show changes related to water content or other organic material, which can be interpreted to show subtle differences between altered and unaltered soil.

However, he said using the radar can be challenging in Newfoundland thanks to the island'sterrain.

"Alot of [the terrain]has GPR noise sources like rocks and roots and things like that. So there are inherent challenges to using it in many of the environments in which we have here in Newfoundland," Grimessaid.

"In Labrador, there are places where the soil is actually quite uniform. Because they are uniform, it means that any disturbances will strike a more obvious contrast."

Withthe team's work still in development,Rankin said, the working group's next steps are still unclear.

"I hope that it plays out theway they want it to, and they get some chance to heal from this," she said."Here in Newfoundland and Labrador, I think we have more work to do yet to figure out what this situation is going to be. But there's no rush."


Support is available for anyone affected by the lingering effects of residential schools and those who are triggered by the latest reports.

A national Indian Residential School crisis line has been set up to provide support for residential school survivors and others affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by calling the 24-hour line: 1-866-925-4419.

Do you have information about unmarked graves, children who never came home or residential school staff and operations? Email your tips to CBC's new Indigenous-led team investigating residential schools:WhereAreThey@cbc.ca.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Patrick Butler