Potential unmarked graves identified at former residential school in central B.C.
The site of a former British Columbia residential school that had its own cemetery since the early 1920s is now the location of potential unmarked graves, says the chief of a Fraser Lake area First Nation.
Nadleh Whut’en First Nation Chief Beverly Ketlo said after almost two years of geophysical survey work, the nation believes it can confirm potential unmarked graves at the site of the former Lejac Indian Residential School, located about 160 kilometres west of Prince George.
The First Nation had always known children were buried at the church-run institution because many of their graves were marked in a cemetery that had been there since 1922, when the school opened, but the survey’s findings suggest a number of unmarked graves, she said at a news conference Saturday.
“We have information today that shows that there are likely grave sites in the location of the Lejac school,” said Ketlo. “We know there were more children there, we just didn’t know where. How many, and this is a question I ask everybody I meet, how many of the schools you attended had graveyards in the backyard?”