FILE - New York Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks at a press conference, Wednesday, July 31, 2024, in the Bronx borough of New York. (AP Photo/Julia Nikhinson, File) AP Tribune News Service Niagara Gazette, Niagara Falls, N.Y. (TNS) Gov. Kathy Hochul will visit Seneca Nation Territory on Tuesday to apologize on behalf of New York State for its role in the Thomas Indian School atrocities. Hochul and Seneca Nation President J. Conrad Seneca announced the plans on Friday. Her visit is believed to be the first time a sitting governor has officially visited Seneca Nation Territory. On Tuesday, Hochul will issue a long-awaited official apology to the Seneca people, as well as all former students and their descendants from various Indigenous Nations, for the State of New York’s role in the operation of the Thomas Indian School. "No words or actions will ever be able to undo the pain and suffering of the Seneca people and other Indigenous peoples across the state, but by visiting the Seneca Nation and the site of the Thomas Indian School we will mark a new day in our relations," Hochul said. "As we prepare to officially recognize the horrifying shortcomings of our past, I thank President Seneca for his advocacy on behalf of the Seneca people and his invitation to the Cattaraugus Territory, and I look forward to further strengthening the relationship between the Seneca people and the State of New York."
Originally established by Presbyterian missionaries on the Cattaraugus Territory in 1855, Thomas Indian School was owned and operated by the State of New York from 1875 until it closed in 1957. Thomas Indian School, and other residential boarding schools across the U.S. and Canada, operated under the government’s policy of forced assimilation of Native children. Thousands of children from various Indigenous Nations were separated from their families and forced to attend the school. They were stripped of the traditional language and culture, and suffered abuse, violence, hatred, and sometimes death, at the hands of school officials. Thousands of children are known to have died at the residential boarding schools. It is believed that the deaths of hundreds — if not thousands — more were never documented. The devastating impacts the boarding schools had on Native American families and communities, including the decimation of family structures and traditional language, are still keenly felt today."
Seneca said, "The severity of the wounds inflicted on our children warrants the historical significance of our Nation welcoming Governor Hochul to the Cattaraugus Territory. The atrocities that our children suffered at the Thomas Indian School have remained hidden in the shadows for far too long. At long last, our people will hear, directly from the governor, the words we have waited lifetimes for the State of New York to say — ‘We’re sorry.’" Added former Seneca Nation President J.C. Seneca — whose father attended Thomas Indian School, and whose grandmother was removed from her family at age 11 and forced to attend Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania, "I know the pain and the trauma because I have seen it and felt it in my own family, just as countless families have borne that pain and carried it every day for generations. The governor’s visit will be an important moment on our road to healing. In coming to our territory and apologizing to our people, the governor can give voice to the children whose youth and innocence were stolen from them."
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