
Canadian Creepies
Welcome to Canadian Creepies—the podcast that digs into the dark corners of Canada’s past and present. Your hosts Valerie, Ali, Amanda Joy ( host of Down the Crooked Path), and sometimes Kyle explore the true crime cases that haunt us, the paranormal encounters that make us question what’s real, and the unsettling folklore that lingers just out of sight.
From cults to cold cases, ghosts to government cover-ups, we don’t just tell the stories—we ask why they still matter.
It’s creepy. It’s Canadian. And it’s probably going to keep you up at night.
Canadian Creepies
Residential Schools: Part 02 Life Inside the Schools
Send us a text, tell us your canadian creepy!
In Part 02 of our series, Ali and Valerie examine what daily life was like for children forced into Canada’s residential school system. We look closely at the strict routines and harsh rules designed to erase Indigenous identities, and the punishments used to enforce obedience.
This episode also confronts the abuse and neglect these children faced—physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, as well as starvation and medical experimentation that put lives and health at risk. We also discuss the central role of the Catholic, Anglican, United, and Presbyterian churches in operating these schools and shaping this system of harm.
These are difficult but necessary stories to tell. We share them to honour survivors, remember those who never returned home, and challenge the ongoing legacy of this system.
🌱 PayYourRent.ca is an Indigenous-led grassroots initiative calling on settlers to engage in ongoing, voluntary financial redistribution in support of Indigenous land defenders, sovereignty, and community well-being.
This foundation supports urgent needs like housing, food security, legal defense, and cultural revitalization—all grounded in the principle that land back also means resource back.
If you live, work, or benefit from life on stolen land, consider learning more or making a monthly contribution at PayYourRent.ca.
Justice isn’t a moment—it’s a commitment.
Edited by Kyle McDonnell