The Niagara Falls Review

Statue a local issue: Minister

Protesters want Edward Cornwallis statue removed from Halifax park

- MICHAEL TUTTON

THE CANADIAN PRESS

WOLFVILLE, N.S. — Federal Justice Minister Jody WilsonRayb­ould said Thursday she defers to the views of local Mi’kmaq leaders on whether a statue of Halifax’s controvers­ial founder should be moved from a city park.

The Liberal cabinet minister was in Wolfville, N.S., Thursday to attend a meeting with Nova Scotia chiefs and MPs to discuss increased self government for Mi’kmaq communitie­s in the province.

Last month protesters pledged to remove a bronze monument to Edward Cornwallis in a Halifax park, but instead the city temporaril­y covered it in a tarp.

Cornwallis, as governor of Nova Scotia, founded Halifax in 1749 and soon after issued a bounty on Mi’kmaq scalps in response to an attack on colonists.

Some members of the Mi’kmaq community have called for the removal of tributes to Cornwallis, calling his actions a form of genocide.

Wilson-Raybould, who is Aboriginal, says the regional leadership of the Assembly of First Nations and “the rest of the community and elders” will determine what actions to take to enhance reconcilia­tion between First Nations and non-Aboriginal residents in Nova Scotia.

“I think under the leadership of regional chief (Morley) Googoo and the rest of the community and elders they will determine what best to happen with the Cornwallis statue in terms of reconcilia­tion,” she said before entering the meeting.

Googoo told reporters it’s not something that he intended to discuss at the gathering.

He said he understand­s the difficulti­es faced by Halifax Mayor Michael Savage, as the local politician proceeds through a process of council meetings and hearings to determine the fate of the monument.

“I respect the mayor’s challenges,” said the chief. “He has to go through committees, make recommenda­tions. The Cornwallis statue, Cornwallis Street, all of these things have to be renamed, you can’t just take the statues down and nothing is there.”

He said there are diverse views among the Mi’kmaq on how the issue should be handled, but there is consensus that figures like Cornwallis should no longer honoured.

“If Mi’kmaq people are offended by it, put it (the statue) somewhere where the story can be told, but don’t honour and worship it in a park like this.”

Perry Bellegarde, the national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, was also at the meeting, which he said was focused on making progress towards shifting away from the Indian Act and towards self government.

Bellegarde said issues like the statue are part of a wider national trend, as Indigenous peoples ask other Canadians to re-examine their history.

“I think there’s a movement across Canada for reconcilia­tion and there’s a big movement to start telling history from First Nations perspectiv­es,” he said.

He noted the federal government’s announceme­nt in June that it is renaming the Langevin building in Ottawa to the Office of the Prime Minister and Privy Council.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said having his office in a building named for Sir Hector-Louis Langevin — a figure associated with the residentia­l school system — clashed with the government’s vision.

“If you want to move down that road and path called reconcilia­tion, it’s very important that you look at all these things from a First Nations perspectiv­e and support those

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 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Rayboud is flanked by Mi’kmaq Grand Chief Ben Sylliboy, left, and Morley Googoo, regional chief for Nova Scotia and Newfoundla­nd, in Wolfville, N.S. on Thursday.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Rayboud is flanked by Mi’kmaq Grand Chief Ben Sylliboy, left, and Morley Googoo, regional chief for Nova Scotia and Newfoundla­nd, in Wolfville, N.S. on Thursday.

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