Re-issued book up against modern standards

By  Nicholas Elbers, Canadian Catholic News
  • January 21, 2024

In just over two decades, the reception to Terry Glavin’s 2002 book Amongst God’s Own: The Enduring Legacy of St. Mary’s Mission has shifted.

“Originally, it was well received, particularly among Indigenous people,” Glavin said of his history of the former St. Mary’s Residential School in Mission, B.C.

But as the years passed, the book’s treatment of the school’s early history has increasingly become a stumbling block for the politically motivated who want to present Canadian history as universally racist and genocidal. 

“It’s high fashion in the intelligentsia, in the universities, to tell a horrible story of Canada as an irredeemably racist colonial state,” said Glavin, an author and columnist. “(The narrative) presents Indigenous people as a monolithic block that was oppressed and robbed — it’s a cartoon.”

Glavin spoke those words during an interview about the republishing of the 2002 book, now titled St. Mary’s: The Legacy of an Indian Residential School for its re-release.

The current edition has been expanded with additional testimonies and photos and was funded through the Archdiocese of Vancouver’s Indigenous Reconciliation Fund. 

Human nature is complicated, and especially west of the Rockies, the relationship between settler populations and Indigenous people was considerably more complex than simplistic narratives would suggest, said Glavin.

Historical ignorance on the part of Canadians is partially to blame, and Canadians have a “peculiar habit” of “rediscovering residential schools every so often.”

Canada has a “long overdue reckoning” with its residential school history every 10 to 20 years, he said. It happened in the 1990s and again during the Truth and Reconciliation Commission from 2008 to 2015. The most recent instance of this “reckoning” was ignited when, in 2021, TheNew York Times labelled the more than 200 anomalies discovered by ground-penetrating radar at the Kamloops Residential School site a “mass grave.” This discovery set off a mass reckoning — including the federal government flying the Canadian flag at half-mast for more than five months — within Canada as it was the first of several such discoveries, none of which to date has been proven to contain the remains of children from residential schools.

Ironically, said Glavin, Canadians reported “basically the same level of understanding of residential school policy” long after Kamloops. He can see nothing positive coming from the firestorm of anti-Catholic bigotry, church burnings and Catholic self-flagellation that followed these discoveries.

“Catholics need to rediscover their spines —  just don’t take it,” he said. “You have absolutely nothing to apologize for. This is important for people to get into their heads: the sins of the father should not be visited on the head of the son. Catholics should know this.”

In the story of residential schools, “Catholics are victims too,” said Glavin.

“The people who suffered in residential schools were Catholics.”

Glavin said he appreciates the additions, which maintain “the overall spectrum of the individual experiences of the Indigenous people” recorded in the original volume. 

Glavin believes the book is a worthwhile contribution to the literature on the Indian residential school experience and hopes it will be something former St. Mary’s students can pass on to their children.

The book is about “one religious order and one residential school,” said Glavin. “I didn’t want the book to be a tribute to the school. I took great pains to present the gritty and nuanced experiences of the Aboriginal people.”

As such, it will be helpful for people who are “really interested in history,” he said, since the book plots “the interesting trajectory of Catholicism among the Indigenous people in what eventually became British Columbia.”

Glavin thinks people will be surprised by the counter-cultural narrative about the Oblates of Mary Immaculate presented in the book. The Oblates originally settled north of the 49th parallel after upsetting both Americans and Indigenous people with their appeals for peace in the Cayuse War in Oregon from 1847 to 1855. They remained controversial in the early 20th century with secular education inspectors when they refused to allow corporal punishment at St. Mary’s.

Because the book recounts the development of St. Mary’s before it became a residential school in the late 1800s, it offers an early vision of the school that is often at odds with contemporary narratives labelling residential schools as rife with systemic racism and abuse. For every story of horror and hurt, there is an account of a Sister of St. Anne staying up late with her young students or a fond memory of a priest coaching soccer teams or organizing dances.

Yet the ratio still skews toward negative stories, reflecting the reality of Indigenous opinions on St. Mary’s, said Glavin, who has close relationships with abuse survivors stretching back to his childhood.

“It’s perfectly possible to sit at a table drinking coffee with some old guys, and one will have a happy memory about St. Mary’s, and one will have miserable memories,” he said.

“Most middle-class Canadians can understand that your high school experience can be ruined by a single mean teacher — imagine that in the context of a boarding school,” said Glavin.

“Your family has no choice but to send you to a residential school because there are no day schools.”

Everything needs to be considered in its historical context, he said.

“There are periods in the school’s history where everyone is happy, and there are periods where some have a good experience, and some didn’t.”

Perhaps the greatest tragedy of St. Mary’s Residential School is that near the end of its operation, the student testimonies are overwhelmingly negative. In the book’s final chapter, even the most positive student accounts acknowledge they would have left the school if given a choice.

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