Today is National Day for Truth and Reconciliation in Canada. With the day off comes an opportunity (and responsibility) to learn about residential schools, through which the federal government and Canadian churches separated children from their families and subjected them to abuse and neglect in loco parentis.
[R]econciliation, in the context of Indian residential schools, is similar to dealing with a situation of family violence.
Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
Although the first residential schools were first established pre-Confederation, their story is shockingly and depressingly recent: residential school populations were at their highest from the 1920s to the 1960s, and some continued to operate well into my own childhood.
My reconciliation activity this year was to read Honouring the Truth, Reconciling for the Future, and I can recommend it and the other publications of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to my fellow settlers.