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Bad People

46. Tiny Shoes: Can we heal injustices against Indigenous peoples?

Bad People

BBC

Society & Culture, True Crime, Unknown

4.41.1K Ratings

🗓️ 11 November 2021

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Earlier this year, hundreds of unmarked graves were discovered at Canadian residential schools. What is the truth behind what really happened at these schools? On this episode, hosts Dr Julia Shaw and Sofie Hagen discuss how trauma can be passed from generation to generation and what can be done to heal the wounds caused by such poor treatment of Indigenous Canadians. They debate whether or not intergenerational trauma should be taken into account in sentencing decisions. In Canada, sentencing judges officially have a “role in remedying injustice against Aboriginal peoples in Canada”, should other countries be following Canada’s lead? This episode contains audio from: DW, Wion, CBS and CBC News' Stolen Children Warning: This episode contains strong language and descriptions of violence CREDITS Presenters: Dr Julia Shaw and Sofie Hagen Producer: Caroline Steel Assistant Producer: Simona Rata Music: Matt Chandler Editor: Rami Tzabar Academic Consultants for The Open University: Dr Lara Frumkin and Dr James Munro #BadPeople_BBC Commissioning Executive: Dylan Haskins Commissioning Assistant Producer: Adam Eland Bad People is produced in partnership with The Open University and is a BBC Audio Science Production for BBC Sounds.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, Gary Lednika here with Alan Shira and Michael Richards to say the match of the day top 10 podcast is back

0:07.4

We'll be ranking our footballing top 10s and debiting. It was right. Well, it's talking me. Not a challenge, Gary

0:14.8

First season wonders to goalkeeping blunders. Nothing is off the table. You had a few blunders in your day, didn't you Gary?

0:22.0

Yeah, matches a top 10. Listen only on BBC sounds

0:27.4

BBC sounds music radio podcasts three two one

0:35.2

Sophie what's something that people don't know about Denmark that our queen

0:41.4

Queen Margaret the second of Denmark. She is the coolest person in the whole world. Oh, listen a queen

0:47.7

So it's cool a cool queen. She is so cool. There are these photos of her just like shoving food into her face

0:55.0

Like just cramming like a cabab into her throat and she does not care how it looks

1:00.7

And there's one where she's like carrying her grandson and drinking from a juice box

1:05.4

She illustrated. I'm not joking. She illustrated the Danish and the English version of the Lord of the Rings books

1:13.8

Under a pseudonym. Nice. My favorite story is like she once sat between

1:18.6

some world leader and

1:21.1

Putin and

1:22.6

Throughout the entire meal she just ignored Putin like she blanked him

1:27.7

Like she bullied Putin

1:30.5

How cool do you have to be to bully Putin? I see why you like her. Everyone in Denmark has like a queen's story

1:37.8

My cousin worked at this restaurant at some point

1:41.2

I mean she went to leave through the fire escape and the queen was just sitting on the stairs

1:46.1

Just like having a drink being like, oh, hey, what's up?

1:50.0

And like I once went into the sneaker store to buy some shoes and the queen left as I came in and I was like was

1:57.1

Is that the queen and the staff were like, yeah, she just needed to buy some trainers

...

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