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Catholics question relationship with church after residential school grave discovery

Bob Hilbig's crisis of confidence in the Roman Catholic Church isn't his first reckoning with the institution that shaped his childhood. It's not even his second.
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Bob Hilbig's crisis of confidence in the Roman Catholic Church isn't his first reckoning with the institution that shaped his childhood. It's not even his second.

But the discovery over the past month of what's believed to be nearly 1,000 bodies in unmarked graves at two former residential schools for Indigenous children could prove to be the last, he said, unless church officials take responsibility.

"I'm really hopeful that there is some transparency and atonement to go around," Hilbig said. "I'll be analyzing...I'm going to be paying close attention to how they react." 

The disappointment that came with news of the residential school grave sites carried reminders of past personal letdowns, he said, including the 2005 appointment of ultra-conservative Pope Benedict XVI and the co-ordinated coverups of priests' sexual abuse of children. 

Given that recent history, the 35-year-old Hilbig said, along with what he already knew of the residential school system, the discovery of the suspected remains didn't come as a surprise. 

Hilbig, who lives in Richmond Hill, Ont., is among the lapsed and practising Catholics who are re-examining their relationship with the church given the recent news. 

Cowessess First Nation in Saskatchewan announced Thursday that ground-penetrating radar detected 751 unmarked graves at the cite of the former Marieval Indian Residential School. Last month, the Tk'emlups te Secwepemc First Nation said the same technology found what are believed to be the remains of 215 children at a former school site in Kamloops, B.C.

Hilbig said he's looking to church officials to take accountability, and he's already seen signs that might happen. 

After initial resistance, the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate — the religious order that operated both schools — pledged to release all their records related to all such facilities. 

So did the Sisters of St. Ann, an order of nuns whose members worked at residential schools.

Hilbig said those moves give him hope that the institution that was the bedrock of his youth could start to redeem itself. 

But Hilbig's complex relationship with the Roman Catholic Church is distinct from his relationship with God, he noted. 

While he's been given cause to question the former, he knows his faith will remain steady. 

When he was 10, Hilbig said, he and his extended family surrounded his grandfather as he died. 

"And when he did, he smiled. That's been a sort of an anchor for me, and it's rather unshakeable," he said. 

"My relationship with God isn't bound by the church. It's informed through the (church's) teachings, but it's not bound by it."

Hilbig said it may be time for governments in Canada to reconsider their relationship with religious institutions as well. 

"I hope this is an inflection point for Canada to evolve," he said. 

Shannon Bernard of Toronto is grappling with similar questions.  

Her eldest son is wrapping up Grade 1 in Catholic school and her younger boy is due to start junior kindergarten in the fall. 

Bernard was adopted into a Catholic family and attended Catholic school as well. She began to question the church as a teenager and no longer considers herself a member of the religion, but decided to enroll her boys in Catholic school at the advice of some teacher friends.

She's now second-guessing her choice, wondering whether the system will offer her sons the education about residential schools she missed out on when she was a student. 

"I definitely have considered maybe a switch out of the school system if it just remains the status quo," Bernard said. "I'm just hoping to see some changes over the next few months or a year."

Bernard, who is First Nations and has family members who attended residential schools, said she's also looking to the church for an apology she doubts will ever come. 

Pope Benedict XVI expressed "sorrow" over the residential schools in a statement in 2009, but Bernard said that isn't enough. 

"It was an acknowledgement, not an apology," she said. 

The current pontiff, Francis, has also stopped short of a formal apology, which has disappointed Clara Casucci-McLeod of Niagara Falls, Ont. 

The 67-year-old's first schism with the church came roughly three decades ago when a Catholic priest refused to officiate her marriage to a divorced man. 

Casucci-McLeod's distaste at the drive to convert non-believers to Catholicism — amplified about a decade ago when she started learning about the atrocities committed in the residential school system in God's name — served to deepen the rift. 

But tight family ties to the religion kept her connected to the institution even as her faith changed, so she was watching the last papal conclave with interest.

"I had such high hopes for Pope Francis," she said. "I remember when he stood on that balcony, and I remember crying when he came out and feeling this overwhelming feeling of, this is such a good person. He is going to make a difference. 

"And I believe he has. But he hasn't gotten far enough. He's so disappointed me."

The Indian Residential Schools Resolution Health Support Program has a hotline to help residential school survivors and their relatives suffering with trauma invoked by the recall of past abuse. The number is 1-866-925-4419.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 27, 2021.

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press