a nurse takes a blood sample from a boy at the indian residential school in port alberni, b.c. during a medical and dental survey conducted by the department of national health and welfare in 1948.library and archives canada
by: allison daniel
if you are an indian residential school survivor, or have been affected by the residential school system and need help, you can contact the 24-hour indian residential schools crisis line: 1-866-925-4419.
the discovery of hundreds of children’s remains in kamloops, brandon and cowessess have exposed the absolute devastation settlers inflicted upon indigenous children, families and communities through the indian residential school system.
most experiments up to then had been done in animals, but researchers like pett, who was the main author of what later became canada’s food guide, capitalized on the opportunity to use indigenous people as lab rats.
while perpetrators like pett often operated under the façade of comprehending and helping indigenous people, racial underpinnings of these nutrition experiments have been clear.
investigators sought to unravel the “indian problem.” moore, tisdall and their collaborators attributed discriminatory stereotypes like “shiftlessness, indolence, improvidence and inertia” to malnutrition.
a.e. caldwell, principal of alberni indian residential school, claimed the malnutrition was caused by traditional diets and ways of living, which he also called “indolent habits.” the nutrition experiments, alongside the profoundly inadequate and low-quality foods given to children in residential schools, aligned perfectly with caldwell’s mandate of assimilation.
according to mosby’s findings, pett stated that he aimed to better understand the “inevitable” transition away from traditional foods, yet indian residential schools were purposefully designed to cause this.
their research is unethical by contemporary standards, and it is hard to believe it was ever acceptable to experiment on anyone, let alone children, without consent.
this particular story of malnutrition and nutrition experiments on indigenous children and adults has been told before. it caught mainstream media’s attention in 2013 after mosby’s research and advocacy.
and it comes as no surprise to indigenous people, whose truths we must finally, deeply listen to.
allison daniel, phd candidate, nutritional sciences, university of toronto.