Anglican Journal Staff

ARTICLES

Chancellor named

Tyndale College & Seminary has appointed Rev. Dr. John N. Gladstone chancellor. Dr. Gladstone served Baptist churches in various parts of Britain. In 1965, he

Land must be shared: bishop

The Bishop of Harare, Jonathan Siyachitema, has issued a statement on the invasion by war veterans of white-owned farms in Zimbabwe. He said the diocese

Co-ordinator hired

Chris Hiller was recently named indigenous justice co-ordinator with Partnerships in Mission, based at Church House. She will work with aboriginal and non-aboriginal groups, primarily

June Bradley

June Bradley, 71, a former consultant in lay adult education and curriculum development, died on April 27 while on a cruise with her husband, Rev.

“Dark, black cloud”

Aware of the “dark, black cloud” that hung over Native communities in Canada, Phil Fontaine, Grand Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, came forward

Eight victims killed themselves

I visited Sampson on the Siska Indian Band Reserve five kilometres south of Lytton. It’s here on a reserve that has an estimated 90 per

Who is to blame?

The plight of residential-school "survivors" such as Pratt raises the question of whether God’s words in the second of the Ten Commandments – "I will

Apology and contrition

In their paper, The Promise and Pitfalls of Apology, to be published in the Journal of Social Philosophy, Canadian academic Trudy Govier, a professor at

Frustration level peaked

Another prime example of Natives taking financial matters into their own hands comes in the form of the Aboriginal Healing Foundation, a $350-million pool of

Family relationships were lost

Some teachers and workers went to residential schools with sinister motives and almost no fear of reprimand. “Missionary bodies all too often were unwilling or

Not all students, not all teachers

But if all perspectives of Indian residential schools are to be taken into account, it must be understood that these schools were not all bad

Powerful emotional fallout

Not everyone is so willing to talk. "If you come onto my reserve, I’ll get you." These are some of the last words I hear

Twenty other victims came forward

Where and when will the cycle of crime and punishment end? “Some want an eye for an eye, others just want to forget,” says Garnet

Skip to content