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Presbyterian Church Apologizes For Its Role In Forced Assimilation Of Indigenous Populations

Emily Schwing
The Presbyterian Church's Curt Karns read an apology before hundreds gathered for the Alaska Federation of Natives Convention in Fairbanks, AK.

The Presbyterian Church officially apologized to indigenous people across the country during a gathering of Alaska Native people this weekend. For decades the church took part in the forced removal of children from their homes and families--and it happened in the Northwest.

Some of those children came from the Nez Perce tribe. From 1879 to 1940, they were sent by train to a government boarding school in Oregon, where their braids were cut off and they were forced to wear military uniforms. Presbyterians missionaries taught at that school and ran others in Idaho as well.

Curt Karns, an executive priest in the church’s Yukon region read the apology before hundreds of attendees at the 50th annual convention of the Alaska Federation of Natives.

“You did nothing wrong. you were and are the victims of evil acts that cannot under any circumstances be justified or excused,” he said.

Jerry Isaac, a well-known Alaska Native leader, thanked the Presbyterian church, but also asked for more.

“I sure wish that other entities that were so guilty, come forward and do the same, including the US Government,” Isaac said.

The church’s apology is similar to one made last spring for what it called “racist actions” during the civil rights era in the 1960’s.