This Man Misled the World About the Mass Graves in Canada

mass graves canada

Recent photos of Justin Trudeau sharply contrast with the pose he adopted in 2021 to mislead the world with the alleged mass graves hoax at Canada’s residential schools.


 

People have been talking in recent days about the photos portraying former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The 54-year-old was photographed enjoying himself like a teenager, attracting both irony and criticism.

We are not interested in the gossip; rather, we want to highlight the stark contrast between the recent photos and the dramatic cinematic pose he artificially assumed just a few years ago.


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Trudeau’s deception over the mass graves

It was 2021, and Trudeau decided to use the full weight of his institutional role to spread the story of the alleged mass graves supposedly discovered near the residential schools in Canada, owned by the state but managed by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate.

After ordering the flags to be flown at half-mast across Canada, the then-prime minister had himself photographed kneeling, with a sorrowful expression and a teddy bear placed in front of a burial site near the former Marieval Residential School in Saskatchewan.

He then explicitly demanded that the Catholic Church answer for the alleged “genocide.”

The problem is that it was simply a regular cemetery, used by the same Indigenous communities for generations. Trudeau already knew perfectly well at the time that no mass grave had been found and that no excavations had even been carried out.

That gesture immediately spread around the world and helped transform a hypothesis that had yet to be verified into something perceived as an already established truth.

It also fueled months of anti-Catholic hatred (+260% hate crimes in a short time), which led to the burning of 120 churches in Canada, including—ironically—those used by the same Indigenous Canadian communities.

 

Justin Trudeau

 

“The greatest hate hoax”

Only later, after years of costly investigations, did authorities have to acknowledge the absence of evidence for mass graves at residential schools, leading the government itself to officially halt the searches in 2025.

No bodies, no remains, no verified collective burials.

Wilfred Reilly, professor of Political Science at Kentucky State University, called it the «greatest hate hoax of all time».

UCCR had already pointed this out in 2021 by interviewing Jacques Rouillard, historian at the University of Montreal and one of the leading experts on residential schools.

Last August, 63% of Canadians had realized they had fallen for a massive fake news story. We hope that percentage has increased today.

Looking at the recent images, one cannot help but wonder whether 54-year-old Justin Trudeau, between one dance and another, has ever regretted deliberately misleading millions of people.

Author

The Editorial Staff

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