August 2021 Issue 153

Page 78

Coming to terms with the history of residential schools

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n early June, in the wake of 215 unmarked graves of Indigenous children having been discovered on the grounds of the Kamloops Residential School, the NDP forced debate in the House of Commons to bring the Liberal government to action. I spoke about the cultural genocide and forced assimilation inflicted upon an entire people, and the atrocities suffered by Indigenous children forcibly ripped from their families by the government and the Catholic church. Since that time, the number of discovered unmarked graves near former residential school sites has increased dramatically, including 160 uncovered by Penelakut Tribes right here in our riding. As Justice Murray Sinclair, Chairman of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), stated at the time of its report, there will likely be thousands more discovered in the future. The Government of Canada claims no relationship is more important than that with

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Indigenous Peoples, but it has mainly offered platitudes and symbolism instead of real action, and it continues to spend millions of dollars fighting residential school survivors in court. Although the NDP motion in June was unanimously adopted by all those present in the House, the Prime Minister and his cabinet couldn’t be bothered to show up for the vote. They abstained by being deliberately absent – actions that speak much louder than all the lofty rhetoric we have heard thus far. If the global pandemic we all have just endured for the past 17 months has demonstrated anything, it’s how quickly governments can act in times of crisis, both with policy changes and in delivering assistance. And if the uncovering of undocumented and unmarked graves of Indigenous children isn’t evidence of genocide – and, therefore, a crisis – I don’t know what is. Six years ago, Trudeau promised to enact all 94 of the TRC Calls to Action. Their record: just 13 have been completed. Indigenous people keep waiting and wondering: what will be the watershed moment – that moment that finally results in systemic change and true justice on the path to reconciliation? This government has a responsibility to abandon the platitudes, symbolism, and lofty rhetoric, and finally face its ugly past with real action for survivors and their families.

Alistair MacGregor is the Member of Parliament for CowichanMalahat-Langford. He serves as the federal NDP’s Critic for Agriculture and Agri-food, Rural Economic Development, and deputy Justice.


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Articles inside

August Forecasts

6min
page 85

What You May Not Know About Hydration

2min
page 80

Coming to terms with the history of residential schools

2min
pages 78-79

100 Years of Cobble Hill Hall

7min
pages 75-77

Virtual Cobble Hill Fair

2min
page 74

Summer is for the Bees

1min
page 71

Ospreys in Cowichan Bay

3min
page 69

“Marie” – A Significant Technological Innovation

1min
page 68

HOME & GARDEN Water Gardening - A Natural Addition to the Garden

2min
page 70

Brilliant Open-Minded Dedicated. Today’s BOD Experience

6min
pages 65-67

Let’s Try It Out

2min
page 64

St. John’s Academy Shawnigan Lake

1min
pages 62-63

Duncan Christian School

1min
page 61

Evergreen Independent School Cobble Hill

1min
page 60

Marshall Hugh Kaiser New Works at Excellent Frameworks Gallery

2min
pages 55-56

Visual Poetry of Susie Cipolla at Aquamaris Art Gallery

2min
page 54

Queen Margaret’s School Duncan

1min
page 57

Do You Have Rosacea?

2min
page 53

Are you Grounded?

2min
page 52

What is Pelvic Health Physiotherapy?

3min
pages 50-51

Rewild Your Creativity & Expand Your Range of Play

2min
page 47

Indigenous Artist James Darin Corbiere

3min
pages 44-45

Artful Environmentalism and Togetherness

2min
page 43

Forest: Breath of Life

1min
page 42

Pop-Up Exhibitions at Westholme

1min
page 41

All Revved Up with Someplace to Go

1min
pages 38-39

PETS, RECREATION & NATURE Truly Experience Chemainus’s Coast

2min
page 34

CVCAS Celebrates with 20/20 Vision

2min
page 36

Summertime Finds

1min
pages 32-33

Are You Eating Flowers

2min
page 31

Summer at Made in Mexico

1min
page 30

Experience Tea in a New Way

2min
page 29

Celebrate local ‘At Home’ during our largest annual food celebration and fundraiser

2min
page 28

Paella Traditions at Cherry Point Vineyards

1min
page 27

Torn Basil, Heirloom Tomato, and Mozzarella Fresca Salad

1min
page 26

The Bloodhound Cocktail

1min
page 24

It’s Summer, so Quill Out

3min
page 21

Viva La Baguette

2min
page 20

BODY, MIND & SOUL Why We Should Read: Black Water

3min
page 16

Handling the Heat

2min
page 18

LOCAL ARTS 2021 Cowichan Valley Shakespeare Festival

2min
page 8

LOCAL FOOD & DRINK Let’s Save the Fruit

2min
pages 9-11

Sustainability in the Wine Industry

4min
pages 14-15

OUR COMMUNITY August Events

3min
pages 5-7

Host an At-Home Wine Tasting with Cowichan Wines

2min
pages 12-13

Silverside Farm Blueberry U-Pick

1min
page 19
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August 2021 Issue 153 by Cowichan Valley Voice - Issuu