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The scars of Native American boarding schools

Post Reports

The Washington Post

Daily News, Politics, News

4.45.1K Ratings

🗓️ 11 October 2023

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Correction: A previous version of this episode incorrectly stated when Interior Secretary Deb Haaland began her listening tour. Haaland started the listening tour last summer, and the tour has lasted for longer than one year The audio has been updated to remove the error.


In a moment of reckoning, survivors of the U.S.-run Indian boarding schools are speaking out and trying to hold the U.S. government accountable.


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For almost a century, the U.S. government took Native American children from their families and forced them to attend residential boarding schools. These schools – which were intended to assimilate the children into White culture – left lasting impressions on the students who attended. Many suffered from physical, emotional and sexual abuse at the hands of school employees.


While the history of Indian boarding schools in the United States is largely forgotten, survivors of these institutions are starting to speak out and share their experiences. Reporter Dana Hedgpeth spoke to several survivors who chose to tell their stories publicly for the first time. 


Today, what it means for Native Americans to speak openly about the abuse they survived, and what it would mean to hold the United States accountable for its role in running the nearly 400 Indian boarding schools across the country.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, it's Ella Hay, just a warning that this episode contains descriptions of sexual abuse.

0:09.1

So please take care where and with whom you listen.

0:14.0

So Jim, thank you so much for coming.

0:16.1

Welcome.

0:17.1

Welcome to Washington and tell us a bit about yourself and your community.

0:21.2

Yeah, thank you, Dana.

0:23.6

My in-upiate name is Akbar Yook, which means fast runner.

0:29.0

And when I was younger, it was definitely, I lived up to my name, but at 76, not so much.

0:37.0

This is Jim LaBelle.

0:38.1

He came from Anchorage, Alaska to talk to reporter Dana Hedgepath about something he's

0:42.7

rarely spoken about in the public.

0:45.3

His experience at a boarding school for American Indian children.

0:49.7

And here's just the beginning.

0:51.7

It's only a part.

0:54.9

I should tell you about how I didn't know who I was when I graduated.

1:01.0

I didn't know who I was.

1:05.3

Take us back a bit to what your home life was like.

1:10.9

And then tell us what you remember about when you first left for Wrangle Institute

1:17.8

in the last good boarding school.

1:20.6

It all began one day when my mother took my younger brother and I by her hand and in very

1:30.4

terrible ways.

1:32.7

She informed us one day that she was sorry, she was going to have to let us go.

...

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