https://trc.ca
TRC Website - NCTR
The TRC website has been archived using the Wayback Machine software. You can view the archived version by clicking here. The Wayback Machine is an archive…
TRC Website - NCTR The National Residential School Crisis Line 1-866-925-4419 ShopDonateEnglishFrançais Your RecordsViewView Your RecordsAbout the ArchivesInteractive MapArchive Tutorial VideosPreservePreserve Your RecordsProtect the KnowledgeIAP/ADR RecordsIAP/ADR FAQsShare Your ExperienceAccessAccess Your RecordsSurvivor AccessResearcher AccessProactive DisclosureEducatorsAccess and Privacy PoliciesReportsView ReportsYour RecordsThe NCTR is your Centre. The stories and records cared for by the NCTR are a crucial part of the shared history of Canada. Understanding these truths is a vital foundation for the future.EducationEducationOverviewScholarshipsTeaching ResourcesEducation ResourcesResidential School HistoryUnited Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous PeoplesEducational ProgramsReconciliACTION PlansImagine a CanadaDecolonizing LensNCTR Education PresentationsNCTR Partner Educational ProgramsNCTR DialoguesTruth and Reconciliation WeekTruth and Reconciliation Week 2024Mino-pimatisiwin – The Good Life 2024Truth and Reconciliation Week 2023Truth and Reconciliation Week 2022Gidinawendimin – We Are All Related 2022National Day for Truth and Reconciliation 2022Truth and Reconciliation Week 2021Every Child Matters 2020EducationPart of the NCTR mandate is to preserve and make accessible the memory and legacy of the residential school system and the experiences of Survivors and their families for future generations.ExhibitsView ExhibitsOverviewThe Survivors’ FlagThe Bentwood BoxResidential School TimelineDevelopment of the National Centre for Truth and ReconciliationIndian Residential School ApologyRemembering the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Closing CeremonyExhibitsTo help foster reconciliation and healing, the NCTR curates both digital and material exhibits documenting the history and legacy of the residential school system for the benefit of all Canadians.MemorialNational Student MemorialOverviewSearch by SchoolSearch by NameMemorial RegisterMemorial MapMemorial BookStudent Memorial Register FAQNa-mi-quai-ni-makAboutCommemorative Support FundCommunity Healing FundNa-mi-quai-ni-mak Fund FAQMeet the Regional Advisory CommitteeMemorialThe National Student Memorial Register was created to remember and honour the children who never returned home from residential schools, now and into the future.The Na-mi-quai-ni-mak (I Remember Them) Fund at the NCTR offers two separate grants to support commemorative and community-based healing initiatives.ResearchResearchOverviewProjectsPublicationsGraduate Research ScholarshipSmall Research Grants FundResearchWe respectfully promote and advance research in areas related to the legacy of residential schools. Academic and community-based researchers can access material held in the archives as well as contribute to the living legacy of the NCTR.News & EventsNewsNCTR NewsNewsletterNCTR EventsAll EventsCommunity EventsNational Advisory Committee on Residential School Missing Children and Unmarked BurialsNews and EventsStay up to date with NCTR news and events.AboutAboutOverviewAbout the NCTRNCTR LogoOur MandateUniversity of ManitobaOur PartnersNCTR Governance2023 Annual ReportWho We AreMeet the StaffMeet the Governing CircleMeet the Survivors CircleIn MemoriamMessage from the Executive DirectorMessage from the President and CommissionersCareersHistory of the TRCTruth and Reconciliation Commission of CanadaTRC CommissionersHonorary WitnessTRC WebsiteAboutThe NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe for future generations.ContactContactContact UsSurvivorsEducationMediaResearchersIAP ContactContactOur goal is to make your path to information as clear and easy as possible. Whether you are a survivor, member of the media, or a researcher.Your RecordsViewView Your RecordsAbout the ArchivesInteractive MapArchive Tutorial VideosPreservePreserve Your RecordsProtect the KnowledgeIAP/ADR RecordsIAP/ADR FAQsShare Your ExperienceAccessAccess Your RecordsSurvivor AccessResearcher AccessProactive DisclosureEducatorsAccess and Privacy PoliciesReportsView ReportsYour RecordsThe NCTR is your Centre. The stories and records cared for by the NCTR are a crucial part of the shared history of Canada. Understanding these truths is a vital foundation for the future.EducationEducationOverviewScholarshipsTeaching ResourcesEducation ResourcesResidential School HistoryUnited Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous PeoplesEducational ProgramsReconciliACTION PlansImagine a CanadaDecolonizing LensNCTR Education PresentationsNCTR Partner Educational ProgramsNCTR DialoguesTruth and Reconciliation WeekTruth and Reconciliation Week 2024Mino-pimatisiwin – The Good Life 2024Truth and Reconciliation Week 2023Truth and Reconciliation Week 2022Gidinawendimin – We Are All Related 2022National Day for Truth and Reconciliation 2022Truth and Reconciliation Week 2021Every Child Matters 2020EducationPart of the NCTR mandate is to preserve and make accessible the memory and legacy of the residential school system and the experiences of Survivors and their families for future generations.ExhibitsView ExhibitsOverviewThe Survivors’ FlagThe Bentwood BoxResidential School TimelineDevelopment of the National Centre for Truth and ReconciliationIndian Residential School ApologyRemembering the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Closing CeremonyExhibitsTo help foster reconciliation and healing, the NCTR curates both digital and material exhibits documenting the history and legacy of the residential school system for the benefit of all Canadians.MemorialNational Student MemorialOverviewSearch by SchoolSearch by NameMemorial RegisterMemorial MapMemorial BookStudent Memorial Register FAQNa-mi-quai-ni-makAboutCommemorative Support FundCommunity Healing FundNa-mi-quai-ni-mak Fund FAQMeet the Regional Advisory CommitteeMemorialThe National Student Memorial Register was created to remember and honour the children who never returned home from residential schools, now and into the future.The Na-mi-quai-ni-mak (I Remember Them) Fund at the NCTR offers two separate grants to support commemorative and community-based healing initiatives.ResearchResearchOverviewProjectsPublicationsGraduate Research ScholarshipSmall Research Grants FundResearchWe respectfully promote and advance research in areas related to the legacy of residential schools. Academic and community-based researchers can access material held in the archives as well as contribute to the living legacy of the NCTR.News & EventsNewsNCTR NewsNewsletterNCTR EventsAll EventsCommunity EventsNational Advisory Committee on Residential School Missing Children and Unmarked BurialsNews and EventsStay up to date with NCTR news and events.AboutAboutOverviewAbout the NCTRNCTR LogoOur MandateUniversity of ManitobaOur PartnersNCTR Governance2023 Annual ReportWho We AreMeet the StaffMeet the Governing CircleMeet the Survivors CircleIn MemoriamMessage from the Executive DirectorMessage from the President and CommissionersCareersHistory of the TRCTruth and Reconciliation Commission of CanadaTRC CommissionersHonorary WitnessTRC WebsiteAboutThe NCTR is a place of learning and dialogue where the truths of the residential school experience will be honoured and kept safe for future generations.ContactContactContact UsSurvivorsEducationMediaResearchersIAP ContactContactOur goal is to make your path to information as clear and easy as possible. Whether you are a survivor, member of the media, or a researcher. Search for: Submit Home/About/History of the TRC/TRC WebsiteTRC WebsiteThe TRC website has been archived using the Wayback Machine software. You can view the archived version by clicking here.The Wayback Machine is an archive system for websites. The archived TRC website will work like a normal website, however, it is not being maintained with current information. The Wayback Machine banner will appear at the top of the webpages, you can close it by clicking the x in the top right corner.For up-to-date information on the NCTR, please utilize the NCTR website and archive:TRC reports and findingsLearn more about the NCTRExplore our collections through the NCTR home pageExplore our exhibitionsFind resources for students and educatorsThe closing ceremony of the TRCSign Up for Our NewsletterStay informed about NCTR news, events and initiatives. Your name*Your email* I identify as a*SurvivorIntergenerational SurvivorFamily member of a SurvivorEducatorAcademicStudentAllyRather not say NCTR’s spirit name – bezhig miigwan, meaning “one feather”.Bezhig miigwan calls upon us to see each Survivor coming to the NCTR as a single eagle feather and to show those Survivors the same respect and attention an eagle feather deserves. It also teaches we are all in this together — we are all one, connected, and it is vital to work together to achieve reconciliation.NCTR is located on the original lands of Anishinaabeg, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, and Dene peoples, and on the homeland of the Métis Nation.The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation sits in the heart of Turtle Island and as a national organization we strive to represent and serve all of Turtle Island’s people. Hours: 8.30AM–4.30PM, Monday – Friday Chancellor’s Hall, 177 Dysart Road, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg 1-855-415-4534 nctr@umanitoba.ca Donate to NCTR Your RecordsViewView Your RecordsAbout the ArchivesInteractive MapArchive Tutorial VideosPreservePreserve Your RecordsProtect the KnowledgeIAP/ADR RecordsIAP/ADR FAQsShare Your ExperienceAccessAccess Your RecordsSurvivor AccessResearcher AccessProactive DisclosureEducatorsAccess and Privacy PoliciesReportsView ReportsEducationEducationOverviewScholarshipsTeaching ResourcesEducation ResourcesResidential School HistoryUnited Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous PeoplesEducational ProgramsReconciliACTION PlansImagine a CanadaDecolonizing LensNCTR Partner Educational ProgramsNCTR Education PresentationsNCTR DialoguesTruth and Reconciliation WeekTruth and Reconciliation Week 2024Mino-pimatisiwin – The Good Life 2024Truth and Reconciliation Week 2023Truth and Reconciliation Week 2022Gidinawendimin – We Are All Related 2022National Day for Truth and Reconciliation 2022Truth and Reconciliation Week 2021Every Child Matters 2020ExhibitsView ExhibitsOverviewThe Survivors’ FlagThe Bentwood BoxResidential School TimelineDevelopment of the National Centre for Truth and ReconciliationIndian Residential School ApologyRemembering the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Closing CeremonyMemorialNational Student MemorialOverviewSearch by SchoolSearch by NameMemorial RegisterMemorial MapMemorial BookStudent Memorial Register FAQNa-mi-quai-ni-makAboutCommemorative Support FundCommunity Healing FundNa-mi-quai-ni-mak Fund FAQResearchResearchOverviewProjectsPublicationsGraduate Research ScholarshipNews and EventsNewsNCTR NewsNewsletterNCTR EventsAll EventsCommunity EventsCommunity EventsCommunity InformationAboutAboutOverviewAbout the NCTRNCTR LogoOur MandateUniversity of ManitobaOur PartnersNCTR GovernanceWho We AreMeet the StaffMeet the Governing CircleMeet the Survivors CircleIn MemoriamMessage from the Executive DirectorMessage from the President and CommissionersCareersHistory of the TRCTruth and Reconciliation Commission of CanadaTRC CommissionersHonorary WitnessTRC WebsiteContactContactContact UsSurvivorsMediaResearchersIAP Contact© 2024 National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation
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