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Victim of residential schools recalls Port Alberni abuse as Reconciliation Week begins

Alvin Dixon was only 10 when he was torn away from his family in Bella Bella and sent to a residential school in Port Alberni. It didn鈥檛 take long before he got his first thrashing. His sin: Speaking his Heisla language with another student.
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"You're sent to an institution very much like a jail, nothing gets better," says Alvin Dixon of the residential school he was sent to as a child.

Alvin Dixon was only 10 when he was torn away from his family in Bella Bella and sent to a residential school in Port Alberni.

It didn鈥檛 take long before he got his first thrashing. His sin: Speaking his Heisla language with another student.

鈥淎 supervisor heard me, took me to the playroom in the basement, leaned me over the bench and walloped me over and over with a strap,鈥 says Dixon, 76, a member of the Heiltsuk First Nation.

It didn鈥檛 get better in the eight years afterwards, he says: 鈥淵ou鈥檙e sent to an institution very much like a jail, nothing gets better.鈥

Residential school led to the loss of his native language, the breakdown of his family and contributed to his own demons, including being an 鈥渆motional terrorist鈥 to his own family in the past.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a whole range of not-so-obvious effects, but lasting,鈥 he says.

Dixon鈥檚 story is similar to the experience of thousands of aboriginal kids who were placed in the residential-school system, which operated in Canada from 1875 to 1996, with the goal of assimilating them into mainstream culture. Many were subjected to emotional, physical and sexual abuse.

鈥淩esidential schools are but one policy in a long list of policies that were implemented in order to incarcerate First Nations,鈥 said Karen Joseph, executive director of Reconciliation Canada, a group working to improve relationships between aboriginals and 91原创s. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a vast majority of 91原创s who are unaware of it, and unaware as to how pervasive it was.鈥

Next week, Reconciliation Canada is holding several events in 91原创 as part of a gathering of the national Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Reconciliation Week kicks off Monday with a fire-lighting ceremony and ends Sunday with a downtown walk and a keynote speech by Dr. Bernice King, daughter of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Up to 50,000 people are expected to participate in the walk.

Reconciliation Week complements the national Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) event at the 91原创 National Exhibition Centre Sept. 18-21.

The four-day event is an opportunity for residential-school survivors to share their experience with the commission and the public. All events are free.

UBC and Trinity Western University are suspending most classes Sept. 18 to encourage students and faculty to attend the TRC event, while the University of the Fraser Valley will replace its curriculum that day with events and displays about residential schools and their legacy.