KHTHON FIELD INTELLIGENCE
REGION: AMERICAS / NORTH
CLASSIFICATION: OPEN SOURCE
60°00'N 095°00'W
ALT: 36,000 FT
PASS: 001 OF 001
SENSOR: SAR / OPTICAL
RES: 0.5M GSD
STATUS: ACTIVE
TRC DOCUMENTED SITES
UNMARKED BURIALS: 139+
LAST UPDATED: 2024
Our Research Americas Canada

Canada

Country Overview Cultural Genocide Unmarked Burials
01 · Overview

Country / Region Overview

Canada is a federal democracy with a strong international reputation for stability and prosperity. Beneath this image, however, lies a history of deep harm toward Indigenous peoples.

Beginning in the late nineteenth century, the Canadian government partnered with churches to run the residential school system, designed to forcibly assimilate Indigenous children. For more than a century, tens of thousands of children were removed from their families, subjected to harsh discipline, and often cut off entirely from their languages and cultures. The system, which operated until the 1990s, is now widely recognized as a central mechanism of cultural genocide against Indigenous peoples.

"Many children never returned home, and were buried without dignity or record."

— Truth and Reconciliation Commission

The legacy of these schools has reemerged with painful urgency since 2021, when ground-penetrating radar surveys began revealing hundreds of potential unmarked burial sites on former residential school grounds. Survivors had long testified that children had died at the schools from disease, neglect, abuse, and sometimes violence, but their accounts were rarely investigated. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission documented thousands of deaths and called for further inquiry, leading to a national reckoning. Each discovery confirms what communities had carried in memory: that many children never returned home, and were buried without dignity or record.

As communities continue their searches, the dual responsibility of church and government remains central to Canada's reckoning, exposing how spiritual institutions enabled and perpetuated policies now widely recognized as cultural genocide.

139 Federally funded residential schools operated in Canada
150,000+ Indigenous children forced through the residential school system
4,100+ Student deaths documented by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
1831–1996 Years the residential school system operated
02 · Timeline

Key Events

1831

First residential school established

The Mohawk Institute in Brantford, Ontario opens — one of the earliest institutions in what would become a nationwide system of forced assimilation.

1876

Indian Act enacted

The federal Indian Act formalises the legal framework enabling forced removal of Indigenous children and the suppression of Indigenous governance and culture.

1920

Attendance made compulsory

Amendments to the Indian Act make residential school attendance mandatory for Indigenous children between 7 and 15. Parents who resist face arrest.

1996

Last residential school closes

Gordon Residential School in Saskatchewan closes, marking the formal end of the system — more than 165 years after it began.

2008

Government apology & TRC established

Prime Minister Harper issues a formal apology in Parliament. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission begins its six-year national investigation.

2015

TRC Final Report published

The Commission releases its final report, documenting over 4,100 student deaths, naming the system as cultural genocide, and issuing 94 Calls to Action.

2021

Unmarked graves discovered — Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc

Ground-penetrating radar surveys at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School detect 215 potential unmarked burials, triggering national and international attention.

2021–Present

Ongoing searches at former school sites

Communities across Canada continue radar and forensic surveys at former residential school grounds. Hundreds of additional anomalies have been identified at sites in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and beyond.

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