Issue 39 2021 October 6 NG Times

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The Voice of North Grenville

Vol. 9 No. 39

DID YOU

October 6, 2021

Flag raising marks Truth and Reconciliation Day in NG

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845 Prescott St., Kemptville www.rbheating.com Keeping a minute’s silence in remembrance at the Municipal Centre. Left to right: Councillor Doreen O’Sullivan, Deputy Mayor Jim MacManaman, Oscar Roberts, Zachary Roberts, Councillor Kristen Strackerjan, Bill Montgomery, UCDSB, Michael Barrett M.P., and Steve Clark, M.P.P. Honest, Easy, Auto Parts

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Some time ago, Councillor Kristen Strackerjan raised the possibility of the Municipality marking Truth and Reconciliation Day and, supported by her Council colleagues and municipal staff, decided to make Indigenous issues a focus of municipal attention. Last Thursday, September 30, the most public step to date in following that plan took place outside the Municipal Centre. Mayor, Council, staff, residents and many others gathered in a ceremony to recognize the impact of Residential Schools on Indigenous people and to raise the Every Child Matters

flag outside the building. Before the flag raising, a number of guest speakers spoke to those assembled. Bill Montgomery, a member of the Haida nation and Indigenous Education Lead with the Upper Canada District School Board, shared many of the negative experiences of children in the schools, and the long-term, multigenerational impact these have had on Indigenous families and communities. The main lesson, he said, was that ā€œHurt people hurt peopleā€, as patterns of abuse learned and experienced in childhood can be passed down

through generations. Being punished, often severely, for speaking your language in schools made adults unwilling, or unable to identify with their own culture, and this fear of punishment was also transmitted to their children and grandchildren. However, Bill pointed out, the program of Indigenous education has opened the way for people to reconnect with culture and traditions and has enabled a process of healing to start. Lorraine Rekmans, Anishinabe from Serpent River, President of the Green Party of Canada, and North Grenville business owner, spoke

o t n i l Fal ! ! ! ā€ s g n i v a S ā€œ

of the hurt inflicted on Indigenous people who were yet willing and open to work with the settler community to find reconciliation together. But, she insisted, reconciliation has to be based on truth, on an agreed understanding of what has happened. The next speaker was Finian Paibomesai, noted awardwinning Anishinabek artist from Whitefish River and a resident of North Grenville for many years. He found a home here and has the freedom to express his cultural identity in his art. Reconcontinued on page 2

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