Cultural Genocide of Canada’s Aboriginal People
Recently two events occurred that once again spurred
discussion in Canada about its relations to its Aboriginal population.
On May 28, 2015, Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin of
Canada’s Supreme Court delivered a speech in which she made explicit reference
to Canada’s cultural genocide of its Aboriginal peoples. I am sure many people
were surprised by this speech, and some may have speculated that in her
position Chief Justice McLachlin should not have used such a phrase. On June 2,
2015, Justice Murray Sinclair released the report of the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission that has been exploring the terrible abuses of Aboriginal
children in residential schools from the
late 19th to the late 20th century. He, too, used the
phrase, “cultural genocide.”
Twenty-five years ago I wrote a draft of an article
arguing that Canada’s treatment of aboriginal people did indeed constitute
cultural genocide. Alas, I’ve lost that draft. But I think I was right to use
the term then, and it’s right to use it now.
Chief Justice Beverly McLachlin, wiki commons |
But this is what we’ve done to Canada’s Aboriginal peoples.
The current discussion focuses on cultural genocide in the residential schools
that some 150,000 Aboriginal children were forced to attend. Children there had
their hair shorn, were forced to wear European dress, and were forbidden to
speak their own languages. They were also taught “useful” skills (domestic
service for girls, farming for boys) that might permit them to obtain
employment with Euro-Canadians, but did not learn the skills necessary to maintain
their traditional way of life. On top of this, these aboriginal children
endured severe physical and sexual abuse, often imposed by the very church
officials who were supposed to care for them.
One might argue that a lot of what happened to Aboriginal
children was typical of what happened to anyone living in total institutions;
that is, institutions where officials have total control over the inmates’
lives. Certainly, for the last forty years there has been story after story in
Canada about abuse in orphanages, mental hospitals, home for the
developmentally disabled, and so on. As in the residential schools, much of
this abuse was by church officials.
Justice Murry Sinclair, wiki commons |
More than that, cultural genocide is not merely a consequences
of the residential schools on which the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
focused. Aboriginal cultures are closely
connected to their land base. Without committing physical genocide of Aboriginal
peoples, the British and Canadian governments over the decades removed more and
more cultural groups from their lands. As Chief Justice McLachlin pointed out,
Canada also prohibited some Aboriginal customs, and Christian missionaries did
their best to persuade Aboriginals that their traditional spiritual beliefs
were wrong and backwards.
So far Canada hasn’t done much to “reconcile” with its
Aboriginal population. Prime Minister Stephen Harper was forced to issue an apology
in 2008, but it hasn’t helped much (for more information on this, go to my
website, https://political-apologies.wlu.ca/index.php).
The federal government still provides only about half the amount of dollars per
child for schools on Aboriginal reserves compared to provincial funding. A disproportionately
high percentage of Aboriginals ends up in jail. Aboriginal people don’t even
get enough food, in this land of plenty, as I’ve pointed out in a previous post
on April 4, 2014.
Qu'Appelle Indian Industrial School in Lebret, Saskatchewan ca. 1885, wiki commons |
And no one has even figured out how to stop the
abduction of women and girls who have disappeared
when hitchhiking along the “highway of tears” between Prince George and Prince
Rupert in British Columbia. I asked a friend who used to work in the Department
of Indian Affairs why they didn’t just start a bus service that these women and
girls could use, and she said it wasn’t their jurisdiction, the province would
have to do it. So why doesn’t it?
If I were an Aboriginal person, I wouldn’t be
interested in “reconciling” with the rest of Canada unless significant reforms
were implemented first. There’s a 2005 United Nations document called, Basic principles and Guidelines on the Right
to a Remedy and Reparations for Victims of Gross Violations of International
Human Rights Law and Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law. These
principles provide for reparations to groups, defined as “persons who are
targeted collectively”. Although they aren’t meant to be retroactive to centuries
of colonial policies, they present a sense of what true reconciliation entails,
including “restitution, compensation, rehabilitation, satisfaction, and guarantees
of non-repetition.”
Canada has compensated some individuals for their
stays in residential schools and the abuse they suffered. Also, after several
decades of court challenges, some Aboriginal groups have control over their
lands. In general, the law is more generous to Aboriginals than the federal and
provincial governments have been. But
there’s still far more to be done.
Apologies
aren’t enough; either is the truth. Any Aboriginal individual willing to
reconcile with the rest of Canada at this stage in history is a very generous
person.