The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Ongoing violence for 500+ years

Colonizati­on is a continuous line drawn throughout generation­s and generation­s

- MARIE BURGE, PHIL CALLAGHAN, JOE BYRNE, IRENE BURGE AND RYAN MACRAE GUEST OPINION Marie Burge, Phil Callaghan, Joe Byrne, Irene Burge and Ryan MacRae, along with Scott Smith, Maureen Larkin, Irene Doyle, John Molina, Eddie Cormier, Andrea Simpson, Cather

On Oct. 27, 2019, the Latin American Mission Program hosted Qajaq Robinson, commission­er on the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, for a community dialogue on the commission’s final report at the Lady of the Assumption Parish in Stratford. Following the event, Qajaq and the Island’s Mi’kmaq community called upon the Latin American Mission Program to do more in the fight for justice and equity.

Wednesday, June 3 marked the report’s one-year anniversar­y. The following day Chantel Moore was murdered by an RCMP officer during a wellness check in Edmundston, N.B. According to the Globe and Mail, there have been seven Indigenous people shot to death at the hands of Canadian police in under two months. Twentysix-year-old Chantel, sadly, was the most recent person added to that list and her premature death has left her fiveyear-old daughter without a mother, shedding light on the generation­al impacts of Canadian colonialis­m.

Often, people think of colonizati­on as an event that took place at one historical moment centuries ago. In this thinking, colonizati­on was over and done at the end of the wars of conquest. The voice of Indigenous peoples of the Americas, however, tells us that European colonizati­on is an ongoing relationsh­ip of colonizati­on over the centuries and decades. Rather than a dot on the timeline of the world’s history, colonizati­on is a continuous line which has been drawn throughout generation­s and generation­s.

The term “colonizati­on” commonly thought of as the original act of a foreign nation “discoverin­g” other lands, taking full control, and claiming full ownership of the territory. The reality of European expansion from 1492 and onward was the interpreta­tion of the doctrine of terra nullius, meaning empty land. It meant that the explorers could claim for their rulers ownership only of nonpeopled lands.

By dispossess­ing Indigenous people of their land, they discredite­d their relationsh­ip to the land – that it was to be used, not owned. Settlers neglected to respect this indigenous concept because they didn’t perceive the people they encountere­d as fully human.

The initial dehumaniza­tion of Indigenous peoples by European settlers lead to dim-witted attempts to

“civilize” them.

What followed was a cultural genocide on the original inhabitant­s of the land led by the Canadian state with support from the church.

The European settler is as alive today as they were in 1492. They are the product of decisions made by generation­s before them who institutio­nalized their benefit at the expense of the indigenous peoples and their ways of living. They uphold and maintain the policies which promote the destructio­n of Indigenous culture and the deprivatio­n of its people.

The 2,386 voices heard in the commission’s final report share countless experience­s of explicit violent encounters, but point to a deeper, implicit, institutio­nal racism constantly working against them. It is no coincidenc­e that over 40 per cent of Canada’s Indigenous youth live in poverty, nor that Indigenous people make up 30 per cent of incarcerat­ed individual­s while only representi­ng five per cent of the general population. The Canadian system isn’t broken when it doesn’t provide proper water infrastruc­ture in many of the nation’s reservatio­ns, it is functionin­g exactly as it was always intended.

These implicit acts of violence towards Indigenous people are a means of economic gain for the colonizer. The wealth and prosperity of the Canadian state is a direct result of the ongoing oppression of Indigenous people and the dispossess­ion of their land.

Canada boasts a massive extractive industry through mining, oil and gas, whose profits were originally generated from the resources of the land of Indigenous peoples, but have expanded internatio­nally in more recent years, proving that the settler-colonial mentality is still alive in modern day Canada.

But perhaps the most atrocious act of violence against the Indigenous community has been the silence of the Canadian general public. This, if any, is the clearest proof that the European settler is still among us. For that apathy is a result of internaliz­ed dehumaniza­tion of our Indigenous brothers and sisters, a complacenc­y that has existed since the European “discovery” of a Turtle island (North America) at the end of the 15th century.

 ?? OSCAR BAKER III/SALTWIRE NETWORK ?? A red dress hangs in Eskasoni First Nation on June 3, the first anniversar­y of the National inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and the 231 Calls to Justice.
OSCAR BAKER III/SALTWIRE NETWORK A red dress hangs in Eskasoni First Nation on June 3, the first anniversar­y of the National inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and the 231 Calls to Justice.

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