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'A powerful message': Alberta unveils new monument to honour residential school survivors

The province unveiled images of a new permanent statue to be placed on Alberta legislature grounds that will honour residential school survivors and the children that never made it home.

The new monument, which will form the centrepiece of the Reconciliation Garden, will be designed by Saddle Lake Cree Nation stone sculptor Stewart Steinhauer.

Titled Mother Earth Circling, the sculpture features Mother Earth holding a small figure, representing baby humanity cradled by the motherly figure of creation.

Steinhauer explained at the unveiling that the monument incorporates petroglyphic images from 8,000 years ago that predicted the coming of Europeans and the treaty process.

"This knowledge is still alive, in spite of a concerted effort to destroy this knowledge," he said. "It's really quite astonishing. The message is a powerful message."

It also contains symbols representing Inuit, First Nations, and Metis people, as well as bear claws, a symbol of healing.

For Steinhauer, stone carving is a way of storytelling but also a personal way to respond and grow from the trauma he experienced through his life.

"I was raised to not express emotions and really not to make an expression and not to talk," Steinhauer said. "And I think that the carving was a spontaneous way of making expression without talking."

Premier Jason Kenney said the location for the monument, at the site of the current seat of Alberta democracy and the historic Hudson's Bay Company Fort Edmonton outpost, will help to connect history.

Indigenous artist Stewart Steinhauer (left) and Alberta Premier Jason Kenney (right) unveil images of the new permanent statue that will be placed within the Reconciliation Garden on the Alberta legislature grounds (CTV News Edmonton/Brandon Lynch).

"That history has been a complicated and often sad and tragic history; it's one that more and more we are opening our eyes to," Kenney said. "A meeting of cultures which too often had a story of injustice and exploitation in it."

Kenney added that the monument and its unveiling on the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation will help to highlight historical wrongdoing but also highlight the strength of Indigenous Peoples.

"This day will not serve its purpose or the dignity of First Nations if it simply becomes a day of mourning because it must also be a celebration of resilience, the resilience of the Indigenous People overcoming adversity," he said.

Sheri Cunningham was a member of the Indigenous panel who screened artists' submissions for the new monument. She recalled how difficult it was to select which monument the province would commission from the seven short-listed submissions.

"Every single one had a narrative attached to it that was so compelling," Cunningham shared. "It was very heart-wrenching to read."

"There was something so beautiful and unique about every single one."

Indigenous Relations Minister Rick Wilson highlighted that the Reconciliation Garden, alongside creating the provincial strategy for addressing missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls and the Alberta Indigenous Opportunities Corporation, as all helping advance reconciliation in the province.

"Today, we take stock of where we came from and recognize that (with) our actions together, we can make healing possible," he said.

Wilson said he was proud that the province was now one step closer to fulfilling the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Call to Action 82, creating a publicly accessible monument honouring residential school survivors.

"We know that learning the truth is central to reconciliation," Wilson added. "The truth will not only help us remember but help us to look forward and focus on future generations to strengthen their potential for success." 

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