A “Witness Blanket” made from pieces of Indian Residential Schools, churches, government buildings and cultural structures was welcomed at Ottawa City Hall May 22 as the first event before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) begins marking the end of its six years of work.
Artist Carey Newman said he was honoured to participate in the truth and reconciliation process “and to provide a tangible visual legacy for the many, poignant stories that survivors from across the country have shared through this process.” The blanket is meant to bear eternal witness to this important part of Canadian history, he added. “It is also meant to create awareness and encourage open conversation.”
By having the exhibition in Ottawa, “the seat of the government that created the Indian Residential School system,” said Newman, “we honour the survivors and the children who were lost, and move forward with hope for true reconciliation and a better future.”
Newman, who is the son of a residential school survivor, plans to showcase the Witness Blanket across Canada over a seven-year period. He calls it “a monument to commemorate the atrocities of the Indian Residential School era.”
Also present for the event were the other two commissioners, Marie Wilson, and Chief Wilton Littlechild, along with Perry Bellegarde, National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, and National Inuit leader Terry Audla.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) is holding its closing events in Ottawa from May 31 to June 3, 2015.