MANITOULIN – Staff and students in Rainbow Schools are invited to wear orange on Wednesday, September 30 in a show of support for residential school survivors.
Orange Shirt Day recognizes the effects and intergenerational impacts of the residential school system on First Nation, Métis and Inuit children in Canada.
“This important and significant gesture will bring us together in the spirit of reconciliation,” says Rainbow District School Board Director of Education Norm Blaseg. “Staff are also welcome to open up or continue the conversation about residential schools with their students.”
“Participating in Orange Shirt Day demonstrates our collective commitment to building an ongoing understanding,” Mr. Blaseg continues. “We invite everyone to wear orange to show students that every child matters.”
Orange Shirt Day began in Williams Lake, British Columbia by the St. Joseph Mission residential school commemoration project. Phyllis Webstad, a young girl from the Dog Creek reserve, attended the Mission in 1973, where her clothes were removed, including her brand new orange shirt.
Phyllis’ story inspired the Mission to declare September 30 Orange Shirt Day, as this was the time of year in which children were taken from their homes to attend residential schools.
To learn more, visit orangeshirtday.org/phyllis-story.html