‘Reuniting was indescribable:’ Communities share stories of searching unmarked graves
WINNIPEG — On a clear summer day in August, Rebecca Blake found herself standing in a cemetery outside Edmonton searching for the graves of Inuvialuit who died in the South during a tuberculosis epidemic.
In a corner of a cemetery in St. Albert, Alta., under some trees she found a section dedicated to Indigenous peoples and a monument holding the names of 98 people buried there from Northern Canada.
As Blake looked around the area she discovered a grim reality.
“I realized there was not enough room for 98 people. Then I learned they were one upon the other, upon the other,” she said.