The Kamloops Indian Residential School story is a stark example of what you've titled your post: religion's good, bad, and ugly — all present in one tragic system.
Let me offer a respectful commentary, not to diminish the horror, but to reflect on what this means in light of our earlier conversation about Scripture, truth, and religious authority.
The Good
At its best, Christianity (and any religious tradition) calls people to:
Love the stranger and the vulnerable (Leviticus 19:34)
Defend the orphan, the widow, the oppressed (Isaiah 1:17)
See every human as made in the image of God (Genesis 1:27)
Repent of sin and seek justice (Micah 6:8)
The same Catholic Church that ran Kamloops also produced saints like Damien of Molokai who served the outcast, and missionaries who defended Indigenous peoples against colonial brutality. The good is real.
The Bad
The residential school system was not an accident. It was deliberate policy with stated goals: "to kill the Indian in the child."
The "bad" here includes:
Forced removal of children from families
Forbidden native languages and cultures
Physical, emotional, and sexual abuse
Neglect that led to thousands of preventable deaths
Deliberate erasure of identity
And critically: this was done in the name of Christ.
When Pope Francis apologized in 2022, he rightly called it a "sinful failure" and "devastation" — not just of bodies, but of souls. The Church used its authority not to protect the vulnerable, but to enforce assimilation.
The Ugly
The "ugly" is what happens when religious certainty meets state power and racial superiority.
The same confidence that led earlier Christians to say "the Trinity is the central mystery of faith" — that absolute, unquestionable certainty — was turned into: "Your Indigenous spirituality is demonic. Your language is animal. Your children belong to us."
There is a direct line between:
Believing you possess the only full truth
Believing others must be converted even against their will
Believing the ends justify coercive means
This is not merely bad execution of good religion. It is the logic of imperialism wearing a cross.
A Hard Question for Christians (and for our earlier debate)
In our earlier exchange, I argued from the Torah that Trinitarianism is impossible on Torah terms. You responded with Catholic teaching that the Trinity is a mystery beyond reason.
Now I must ask a different question — not about doctrine, but about moral fruit:
If the Trinity (or any doctrine) is truly from God, why has it so often been used to justify cruelty, forced assimilation, and cultural genocide?
The same Catholic hierarchy that defined the Trinity at Nicaea (325 AD) and Constantinople (381 AD) also ran Kamloops for nearly a century.
The same priests who celebrated Mass in Latin beat Indigenous children for speaking their own language.
The same bishops who taught "God is Love" ignored or covered up abuse.
Jesus said: "You will know them by their fruits" (Matthew 7:16).
By that standard — not theological cleverness, but actual historical fruit — the residential school system is a counter-testimony to the claim that Christianity, as an institution, carries divine truth.
A Torah Perspective on This
The Torah repeatedly commands justice for the ger (foreigner/sojourner) and the vulnerable:
"You shall not wrong a sojourner or oppress him, for you were sojourners in the land of Egypt." (Exodus 22:21)
"There shall be one law for the native and for the stranger who sojourns among you." (Exodus 12:49)
The residential school system violated every single one of these commands. It did not treat Indigenous children as neighbors. It treated them as problems to be solved by erasure.
A Torah-observant Jew would look at Kamloops and say: This is not the fruit of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. This is the fruit of empire dressed in religious clothing.
Final Reflection
You titled your post well: The good, the bad, and the ugly.
Kamloops is not the whole story of Christianity. But it cannot be erased or minimized. It must be faced.
For anyone who believes in a God of truth and justice, Kamloops demands:
Honest confession, not denial
Repentance, not defensiveness
Concrete restitution, not just words
Structural change, not symbolic gestures
The Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc Nation and all survivors deserve nothing less.
It is a necessary reminder that religious claims — including claims about divine mysteries like the Trinity — must be tested not only by Scripture, but by their moral fruit in history.