First indigenous nun at Canadian school contradicts anti-Catholic ‘mass grave’ narrative
Sr. Dorothy Bob, an indigenous woman and former Kamloops school student, became a Catholic nun after her time at the school, defying the ‘genocide’ myth. Dorothy Bob joined the Sisters of St. Ann in 1960 in British Columbia. Nothing unusual about that. What isn’t so usual is that she was the first indigenous woman to enter the order of nuns.
There is more, much more. Sr. Bob was also a student and later a cook at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. It was the Kamloops Band that on May 27, 2021, made the claim they had found “the remains of 215 children” at the school. Nearly four years later and several excavations no graves have been found, not one.
Sr. Bob found no conflict in being a nun with her indigenous identity. No colonialism for her. She found no difficulty with the two cultures. It was a source of strength to build the common good. Sadly, this view which happens to be the truth, is not presently acceptable in woke Canada.
It’s time to revisit this sad chapter in Canada’s history and to start being honest with ourselves and the indigenous peoples. Canada will be a much better place if we stop pushing the lie of 215 children murdered and others abused by priests and nuns at the residential school.
Q. How many Indian Kids were killed at that School ?
A. Nun