FULL-WIDTH BANNER WEBSITE AD - American Indian OIC

The Native American Boarding School

Share :
Facebook
X
The Circle- Primary

The Native American children were taken away from their families and put into boarding schools to learn the white man’s way of life. Boarding schools were planned by the government so the children would forget their tribal ways. The schools were devastating to the native people. Practicing their tribal ways or speaking the language was punished.                                    

It was forbidden to practice their tribal ways or language because the white people thought it was worthless. There was a lot of racism toward native people. Families couldn’t see their children, sometimes for years. The elders couldn’t teach the children their tribal ways because the children had forgotten. The federal government banned Ojibwe spiritual practices, and they were forced to be Christians.  When they become adults, they didn’t teach their children the tribal ways cause they didn’t want them to suffer. In the summer, many were sent to work on the farms of white settlers.                                        The families of Native American were suffering because they were losing relatives to alcoholism and disease. The diseases were taking many lives and sadness and grief fell over the Ojibwe people. Families were breaking up from alcoholism and lack of jobs. There were many lives taken away due to smallpox, influenza (flu), and tuberculosis. Some people died of poor nutrition.The Ojibwe suffered emotionally for losing their land, not having jobs or money, and losing loved ones. The white man made life difficult for each Native American.

This reporting is made possible by readers like you.

The Circle is a nonprofit newsroom with no tribal affiliation, no corporate ownership, and no paywall. Independent Native journalism depends on reader support.

Advertisement

TOWER_SKYSCRAPER WEBSITE AD - MN DHS - The Circle SUD Campaign DIGITAL (160x550 px) Dad and Son

Recent Stories

Advertisement

CUBE_BUTTON WEBSITE AD - Montessori AICC Dual Trainee Circle (1)

More From EducationNews

Cover of The Circle Summer 2026 issue featuring a sepia-toned portrait illustration of Hunkpapa Lakota leader Sitting Bull, surrounded by Indigenous-inspired floral and geometric artwork and a buffalo skull. The background includes faint historical text, and the cover highlights the 150th anniversary of the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Original cover art by Willard Malebear Jr.

The Summer 2026 Issue of The Circle Is Here!

We’re excited to announce the release of the Summer 2026 issue of The Circle! This issue explores the theme of Resilience & Resistance – two ideas deeply rooted in Indigenous history and reflected in our communities every day. Resilience is found in preserving our languages, cultures, traditions, and ways of life. Resistance takes many forms, from […]

Robert Pilot

The Circle News Names Robert Pilot as Chief Editor

Veteran broadcaster and Ho-Chunk Nation member to lead publication’s next chapter MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — The Circle News, one of the longest-running independent Native American newspapers in the United States, has named Robert Pilot as its new Chief Editor, the organization announced in April 2026. Pilot, a St. Paul resident and enrolled member of the Ho-Chunk […]

EPA wants to eliminate one of the few ways tribes protect their water

By Miacel Spotted Elk/Grist This story was originally published by Grist.  In January, the Environmental Protection Agency announced a proposal to revise the Clean Water Act, specifically a section of the law that regulates water quality and limits states’ and tribes’ authority over federal projects, as well as how tribes can gain the authority to conduct those […]

FULL-WIDTH BANNER WEBSITE AD - American Indian OIC

Search The Circle

Find stories, columns, events, and magazine features.