Sherbrooke Record

Reconcilia­tion requires more than symbolic gestures

- By James R. Miller Professor Emeritus of History, University of Saskatchew­an

In explaining the decision by the city of Victoria to remove a statue of Sir John A. Macdonald from a prominent location outside its city hall, Mayor Lisa Helps tied the action to the cause of reconcilia­tion between Indigenous and non-indigenous peoples.

“It’s been a year of discussion and deliberati­on, and we realized it’s going to be many years of reconcilia­tion,” said Helps.

Others in Canada in favour of removing statues of historical figures or renaming buildings and streets have drawn the same linkage in recent years. Movements against the commemorat­ion of Edward Cornwallis in Halifax, Jeffrey Amherst in Montreal, and Nicholas Flood Davin in Regina have all been related to advancing reconcilia­tion.

Symbolic gestures not enough

Not everyone is convinced these symbolic gestures are appropriat­e or sufficient.

A year ago, when removing Macdonald’s name from Ontario school buildings was being debated publicly, Sen. Murray Sinclair, the former chief commission­er of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, opposed the symbolic approach.

While acknowledg­ing Macdonald “clearly attempted to eliminate Indigenous culture,” Sinclair added: “The problem I have with the overall approach to tearing down statues and buildings is that it is counterpro­ductive to … reconcilia­tion because it almost smacks of revenge or smacks of acts of anger, but in reality, what we are trying to do, is we are trying to create more balance in the relationsh­ip.”

As Sinclair suggested, emphasizin­g the symbolic removal of statues can distract from more substantia­l and important actions like finding ways to honour Indigenous heroes.

The differing approaches of Sinclair and the mayor of Victoria raise the question: What is the best way of promoting reconcilia­tion? Are symbolic gestures sufficient, or is more required?

It is important to acknowledg­e that symbols such as statue removal or other gestures can be important.

Follow-ups are needed

No one who observed then prime minister Stephen Harper’s apology for residentia­l schools in 2008 will doubt the power and impact of that official gesture. The problem with that effort, though, was that Harper failed to follow it up with positive action.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper issues an official apology in 2008 to survivors of Canada’s residentia­l school system.

Harper’s government disappoint­ed Indigenous leaders by not endorsing the United Nations Declaratio­n on Indigenous Peoples, by cancelling funding for the Aboriginal Healing Foundation and by folding the government department that had overseen federal actions to respond to residentia­l school abuse litigation back into the (then) Department of Aboriginal Affairs.

Words without actions were not enough a decade ago. And they do not suffice now.

The distinctio­n between symbol and substance was captured well in an anecdote from South Africa told in my book Residentia­l Schools and Reconcilia­tion: Canada Confronts Its History. University of Calgary law professor Kathleen Mahoney recounted a story of two South Africans — Tabo from the Black majority and Smith from the white minority — brought together in an attempt at reconcilia­tion.

‘What about the cow?’

Smith had stolen Tabo’s cow, destroying Tabo and his family’s livelihood. In the South African Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission process, Smith apologized and Tabo accepted the statement. They hugged, kissed, had a cup of tea together and even shared a few jokes. When Smith was leaving, Tabo asked: “Mr. Smith, what about the cow?” Replied Smith: “Tabo, you are messing up this thing about reconcilia­tion. It has nothing to do with the cow.”

But, of course, true and effective reconcilia­tion must also be about “the cow.” It must involve going beyond apologizin­g and renaming buildings to remedying some of the gross injustices from which Indigenous people suffer in Canada.

It means bringing the funding of onreserve schooling up to the same level other Canadian children receive. It entails energetic action to resolve the approximat­ely 1,000 Indigenous land claims that are outstandin­g. And it must include completing the treaty process in those parts of Canada where territoria­l treaties have not yet been made.

The next time some public figure claims the gesture they are advocating will advance reconcilia­tion, such as declaring A National Day of Reconcilia­tion, ask yourself — and that leader — “But what about the cow?”

James R. Miller in the past, though not at present, has received funding. from The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

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