Ceremony to be held for child’s partial remains found at residential school site
A First Nation in southeastern Saskatchewan is preparing a proper burial after a fragment of a child’s jawbone was found in an unmarked grave during a search of a local residential school site.
The Star Blanket Cree Nation made the discovery in the fall while the community was searching the site of the former Lebret Indian Industrial School.
The bone was identified by the province’s coroner’s service to be that of a child between the ages of four and six from about 125 years ago. It was not located anywhere near an area that was known to be a graveyard.
During an announcement in the community Thursday, the bone sat on a table in a small, teal box with painted white and black feathers. Attendees offered tobacco, an act of respect in many First Nations cultures, as the announcement took place.


