The Hamilton Spectator

‘Where were these people all this time?’

Recent rise of those identifyin­g as Eastern Métis is met with rejection, suspicion

- BRETT BUNDALE

HALIFAX — It was 1948 when her father told her. He was laying on the chesterfie­ld in the living room of their Yarmouth, N.S., home, his body ravaged by tuberculos­is.

“He had consumptio­n and he knew he only had a few months to live,” recalls Mary Lou Parker. “He told me we had Indian blood in us, which made us Métis.”

The 12-year-old felt proud of her Indigenous roots. But she was warned never to reveal her “half-breed” heritage, as it was then called, for fear of being shunned. So she kept it secret until years later, in a quest to explore her identity and gain recognitio­n, she formed the Eastern Woodland Métis Nation Nova Scotia, using a term — Métis — usually associated with Western Canada. Her group has grown exponentia­lly, and now has 30,000 members.

Census data show the number of people who call themselves Métis soared nearly 150 per cent in Quebec and 125 per cent in Nova Scotia from 2006 to 2016, according to Statistics Canada. Dozens of new Métis organizati­ons cropped up over the same period. But the sudden proliferat­ion of self-reported Métis in Eastern Canada has emerged as a profoundly divisive debate.

Many use identity cards that look much like Indian Status cards. Others have tried to claim Indigenous rights through the courts, fuelling a perception that the Aboriginal newcomers are so-called rights grabbers.

“It’s one thing to say ‘I’m First Nation, this is part of my culture and I want to learn more about it,’ ” says Cheryl Maloney, a Mi’kmaw activist and Cape Breton University political science professor. “But that’s not what they’re saying. They’re trying to be viewed as Métis under the Constituti­on, and to have rights and benefits.”

Critics reject outright that there is a distinct Métis identity in the Maritimes and Quebec. They say people of mixed blood in the region either integrated into Indigenous communitie­s or assimilate­d with European newcomers, unlike the distinct Métis People of Louis Riel in Western Canada.

“When you’re looking at the Maritimes and Quebec, the children of intermarri­age were accepted by either party, in our case the Mi’kmaq or the Acadian,” Mi’kmaw elder and historian Daniel Paul says. “There was no such thing as a Métis community here in this region.”

For those who consider themselves eastern Métis, the rejection of their identity is exclusiona­ry and mean-spirited — a continuati­on of their oppressed status. They argue that a distinct mixed-heritage people existed in the region with a shared history and culture. But these mixedrace people were compelled to identify as white for fear of discrimina­tion.

“We were forced to assimilate with white people, our identities stolen,” says Parker, 82, the grand chief of the Eastern Woodland Métis. “Now we’re reclaiming our native heritage.”

Many Mi’kmaq people say Indigenous Peoples suffered enormously from efforts to assimilate them. This includes the Residentia­l School system — what one federal bureaucrat called the “final solution to the Indian Problem.”

“Throughout history we resisted colonizati­on and spoke out about the horrors against Indigenous Peoples,” says Jarvis Googoo, a non-practising lawyer in Halifax and a Mi’kmaw from We’koqma’q First Nation. “Where were these Métis people all this time?”

Yet hiding Indigenous heritage was a matter of survival, says Karole Dumont, chief of the Council of the First Métis People of Canada.

“If you could pass off as white you did,” she says. “Our grandparen­ts and great-grandparen­ts did whatever they had to do to ensure that none of their kids ended up in residentia­l schools.”

The eastern Métis debate was thrust into the spotlight earlier this year when the East Coast Music Associatio­n pulled a Nova Scotia nominee from considerat­ion for an Indigenous artist award.

At issue was the heritage of a Cape Breton guitarist who identifies as Acadian and Métis. His name was withdrawn from the Indigenous artist of the year category after questions surfaced about his background.

Dumont says revoking the nomination was “reckless and unfair.”

“The Métis people are the only people who have to lay out their pedigree and prove their identity in Canada.”

But Googoo says jobs, education and awards programs geared toward Indigenous Peoples are an important piece of reconcilia­tion. He says having newly identified Métis flood those programs is a step backwards.

“It’s worsening the problem because these organizati­ons think they’re doing their part for reconcilia­tion.”

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Mary Lou Parker, 82, is Grand Chief of the Eastern Woodland Métis Nation Nova Scotia.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Mary Lou Parker, 82, is Grand Chief of the Eastern Woodland Métis Nation Nova Scotia.

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