What I told my child about the Kamloops graves—to honour the 215 An Indigenous mother describes the exhaustion of hearing about residential school trauma, and her determination to share those stories with the next generation By Tenille Campbell The memorial outside St Paul’s cathedral in Saskatoon. (Tenille Campbell/ Sweet Moon Photography) Tenille Campbell is a Dene-Métis photographer and writer from the English River First Nation in Saskatchewan. She is based in Saskatoon. Last week, when I first heard about the mass burial where 215 children were found at the Kamloops Indian Residential School in B.C., I skimmed the article, taking note of who and where, how and when. I sighed deeply, shaking my head, and then read the next story.