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“School Board in Favor of Sterilization” Image Transcript

“School Board in Favor of Sterilization.” The Expositor, Brantford, Wednesday, March 20, 1946, p.6.

[The question of the sterilization of the feeble-minded was discussed at the March meeting of the Brantford Board of Education, held Tuesday night with the Chairman, Trustee Dr. James H. Moyle presiding, and the Board expressed by resolution strong approval of the stand taken on the question by Chief Medical Officer of the Brant County Health Unit, Dr. W.L. Hutton.

The Board’s resolution read:

“That the Board of Education approves the request of the Chief Medical officer of the Brant County Health Unit [Dr. W. L. Hutton], to perform the operation of steri“lization at the Brantford General Hospital, and strongly urges the Hospital Board of Governors to accede to his request.”

Copies of this resolution were ordered sent to the Board of Governors at the Hospital and to the City Council.]

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“Report on Coerced Sterilizations of Indigenous Women Spurs Apology, but Path Forward Unclear” Transcript

Hamilton, Charles and Guy Quenneville, “Report on coerced sterilizations of Indigenous women spurs apology, but path forward unclear.” CBC News. Posted: Jul 27, 2017 10:52 AM CT | Last Updated: July 29, 2017

Women speak of pressure from doctors, nurses and social workers to undergo tubal ligations The Saskatoon Health Region apologized Thursday for the past coercion of Indigenous women to undergo surgical sterilization, but the health authority's plans to prevent similar mistreatment of patients remains unclear.

An independent report paints an anecdotal but grim picture of the mistreatment of Indigenous patients by doctors, nurses and social workers in the city, where women felt pressured and harassed to sign consent forms while under the trying conditions of labour.

"I want to apologize to the women who came forward in the review, who've come forward to us in the past, and who haven't yet been able to come forward to us," said Jackie Mann, vice-president of integrated health services, on behalf of the health authority.

"I'm sorry that you were not treated with the respect, compassion ... and all of the support that you needed and deserved," she said during a news conference. "No woman should be treated the way you were treated."

Women unaware it was permanent

Mann's apology came just after the release of the report, written by Dr. Yvonne Boyer and Dr. Judith Bartlett after several women came forward about their experiences.

The 57-page report is not a comprehensive history of past abuses — only seven Indigenous women were ultimately interviewed — but includes details about some of the "scare tactics" used against pregnant Indigenous women.

"Because my daughter had cerebral palsy, the doctor told my husband that all future kids are going to be sick, have some kind of health problem," said one woman.

"The nurses hover, they can make you do stuff you don't want to, just from the pressure alone," said another.

Most of the women did not understand that tubal ligation was permanent, thinking it was a form of birth control that could be reversed in the future, the report says.

"I wasn't told anything, no explanation that it was permanent," one woman is quoted as saying.

The report also cites another woman "who contacted the reviewers because she felt her doctor is currently coercing her into having a tubal ligation during her pregnancy."

New training in place

"Some people may recognize themselves in the report. And I hope they do," said Leanne Smith, the director of maternal services for the health region.

Smith said that since the allegations emerged, she has asked staff to be more proactive about flagging racist comments and attitudes uttered in the workplace.

"I don't think we have done a good job at being able to call each other on what we see," she said of the past.

The independent report made a number of recommendations to the health region — everything from a reproductive centre in Saskatoon for "vulnerable Aboriginal women" to cultural sensitivity training for health-care workers.

Smith said all staff in maternal services have started receiving that training. But Mann said work on a plan to address the report's recommendations hasn't begun yet, and she could not comment on the timeline for specific actions.

Other recommendations include:

  • The creation of an advisory council comprising elders, grandmothers and other community members.
  • Hiring more Indigenous and Métis employees.
  • Reaching out to the women who came forward and offering reparations in the form of an apology.
  • Setting up a support group or anything the women need "for their healing journey."

Smith said that when she checked with lawyers "not many weeks ago," the health region had not been served with any papers related to tubal ligation.

But Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations Chief Bobby Cameron — speaking from this week's annual gathering of the Assembly of First Nations in Regina, before the release of the report — was confident that will change.

"This is not over by a long shot," he said. "I'm positive there's going to be asking for compensation, in a respectful manner.… Then there's going to be lawsuits, class-action lawsuits."

Policy needs more revision: report

The report examines the Post Partum Tubal Ligation Policy that was in place from 2005-2010, during the time period that many of the women stated they were coerced into tubal ligation. The region has already revised its policy for sterilization.

"Now any woman who wants a tubal ligation following delivery must have discussed it with her physician and have that discussion documented prior to coming to hospital," said Smith.

But in their report, Boyer and Bartlett say the policy needs further revision in consultation with Indigenous parties.

No one has lost their job as a result of past malpractice.

"It was hard to know who the staff were that were involved in the situations," said Smith.

Painful memories

For Debbie Ironbow, Thursday's apology brought back painful memories.

The mother of three said she was sterilized in the 1990s without her consent during a C-section.

"I made no decision about it prior to being on that table," she said.

Like several women cited in the report, Ironbow said her experience has made her wary of seeking medical attention for anything to do with her femininity.

"I literally do not have contact with the health region regarding anything female. I go because I have spinal surgery," she said.

She also expressed skepticism at the notion of real change within the system.

"I think it's bigger than the administration can change at this point," she said.

Changes to the system need to be system-wide, not just within maternal services, she said.

"The rebuilding of that trust has to happen. You cannot do that by just saying, 'Oh I'm sorry that happened.'"]

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Dante Jemmott - Eugenics and Mass Media - Transcript

[Dante Jemmott] The two radio addresses that I read were both originally written by William Lorne Hutton. They’re titled Tomorrow's Children and The Future of the Race.

[From The Future of the Race] “We need more children from the strong, vigorous and intelligent and fewer from the weak and imbecile.”

[Dante Jemmott] I was really blown away by how passionate these people were about eliminating certain people from Canada.

[From The Future of the Race] “But if he is feeble in mind or body the State will feed and clothe him and provide him with doctors and nurses. Everything possible will be done to see that he can survive. But little or nothing will be done to see that he does not reproduce his kind.”

[Dante Jemmott] He talked about their genetics are being passed on. And so people are just becoming morefeeble-minded and more feeble-minded. And he very bluntly said it needs to stop those people shouldn’t be allowed to have families – to reproduce.

[From The Future of the Race] “From the standpoint of natural law, this is an unforgivable sin.”

[Dante Jemmott] And I think in order to move forward we need to continue to unpack these things so that we can actually move forward for the better.

[From World Population Since 1750] “A greater danger presents itself in the continuing high fertility rates of the mentally and morally defective. Fertility among such persons remains entirely unchecked. They are continuing to multiply, while the professional and more highly educated groups are falling far short of reproducing themselves.”

[From California Sterilization Policy] “There has been a disproportionate increase of those mentally and physically incapable of maintaining themselves and their families. While agencies to check the reproduction of the subnormal are essential, the greatest safeguard for the future of the race lies in the maintenance of a healthy family life…”

[From German Sterilization Policy] “Germany decided to enact measures to prevent the subnormal elements of the population from increasing. An Act for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring was placed on the Statute Book in July 1933.”

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