The Hamilton Spectator

The life and times of two founding fathers

Should Canadians now lend a hand to help Americans sanitize their history

- JOHN H. REDEKOP John H. Redekop is a Professor Emeritus in Political Science at Wilfrid Laurier University

Now that Mayor Lisa Helps and her fellow Victoria city councillor­s have removed the statue of Sir John A. Macdonald from its pedestal in front of city hall, it is timely to encourage and promote further progressiv­e initiative­s.

As the acknowledg­ed trendsette­r among our provinces, the B.C. government, together with Victoria’s City Council, should take up the cause. It is time for further exculpator­y action.

Let’s begin by urging Ontario to rename the Macdonald-Cartier Freeway. Delete the Macdonald. Quebecers and other Canadians will applaud such progress. Our west coast counsel to Montreal must be to rename its famous 618-metre long Macdonald-Cartier Bridge. Let it be called the Trudeau-Trudeau Bridge since both father and son, as Prime Ministers, have had nothing to do with Sir John.

Several other major realities must be addressed. The Canadian Mint must immediatel­y remove Sir John from the $10 bill. Racism must be removed from legal tender. Then there are the other statues, mounted busts and portraits still in place across the land. They must go. Perhaps the federal Heritage Ministry can launch a recovery program in which, for one year, it offers a bounty of $1,000 for a Sir John statue, $500 for a mounted bust, and $100 for a mounted portrait measuring at least 45 cm by 60 cm. Smaller ones shall be burned. With such payments should go a memorandum encouragin­g the recipients to donate their funds to local school to enhance the teaching of civics and Canadian history.

Unfortunat­ely, all this purging of the past creates a problem for me. For four years as a high school teacher and for 36 years as a university professor I taught thousands of students that Sir John, despite his affinity for alcohol and his acknowledg­ed racism, reflective of his times, was actually a great Canadian hero. I taught that it was he who had a bold vision for Canada, who brought B.C. into Confederat­ion and who, despite a railway scandal, built the railway to the Pacific coast and generally nurtured Canada in developing as an independen­t country north of “the border”.

Now I need to undo my pedagogica­l errors. I’ve wracked my brain about how to get the revisionis­t truth out. To no avail. I’m stymied. At least this article is a start.

Having launched our own renewal of national self-image, we would be welladvise­d to encourage our closest ally and only neighbour to do likewise. Let’s offer the U.S. some enlightene­d counsel. Sending a few tweets from Ottawa should get us started.

In Canada we are beginning with our first Prime Minister. Let’s encourage our American cousins to begin with their first president, George Washington.

This heretofore honoured military commander and president must be exposed for what he was. At the early age of 11, George inherited 10 slaves. At one point, while living in his Mount Vernon Mansion, he had 317. When he died, he owned 123. That’s worse than promoting residentia­l schools!

Equally reprehensi­ble is George Washington’s strong support for Article 1, Section 2 of the 1789 Constituti­on which specified that for purposes of government representa­tion, “those bound to service” (slaves) should be counted as “threefifth­s” of a person. I’d sooner be ignored, as in Canada, than be considered only three-fifths of a human being.

So here’s what we must tell President Trump and members of both houses of Congress. Rename the 555-foot Washington obelisk on the National Mall. “Unity Obelisk” is rather pedestrian but better. Rename the capital city. Call it Americana. We also want Washington state renamed. Call it Cascadia South or Pugetland. Both are better. Also, you should pay states and cities to remove all symbols of your slave holding president.

What can I do to help usher in this much-needed sanitizing of American history? I can tweet President Trump and all (Washington) politician­s. I can also stop buying cheaper gasoline in Lyndon, Washington. That only bolsters Washington’s image and adds to his state’s economy.

 ?? TORONTO STAR RICK MADONIK ?? Last week, Victoria city council voted to remove the statue of Canada's first Prime Minister from city hall as a gesture of reconcilia­tion for Sir John A. Macdonald's role in establishi­ng the residentia­l school system.
TORONTO STAR RICK MADONIK Last week, Victoria city council voted to remove the statue of Canada's first Prime Minister from city hall as a gesture of reconcilia­tion for Sir John A. Macdonald's role in establishi­ng the residentia­l school system.

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