The Niagara Falls Review

Kingston seeks public input on Sir John A. Macdonald’s legacy

‘We need to tell our histories and stories to be more inclusive’

- OLIVIA BOWDEN

KINGSTON, Ont. — The Ontario city where Sir John A. Macdonald lived and worked for years is launching public consultati­ons on the legacy of Canada’s first prime minister in light of heightened scrutiny over his treatment of Indigenous people.

The City of Kingston said that starting next week, residents will get the chance to voice their opinions online and in person on Macdonald and his place in the community’s history.

The public input will be used to develop a report on whether the city needs to offer re-interpreta­tions of local exhibits, monuments and general historic programmin­g in the future, said Jennifer Campbell, Kingston’s manager of cultural heritage.

“What really sparked the need to have a more directed dialogue is our desire ... to think a little bit more deeply about how we unpack our histories, legacies and how they reflect ... Kingston and our residents,” Campbell said. “We need to tell our histories and stories to be more inclusive of all of our residents.”

Macdonald’s role in establishi­ng residentia­l schools and limiting the mobility of Indigenous peoples has made him a polarizing figure. In 1883, he argued in the Commons for the removal of Indigenous children from their “savage” parents so they could learn the ways of white men.

The government-funded, church-run residentia­l schools operated for more than a century. Indigenous children were ripped away from their families, usually starting in late September, and sent to schools where they endured widespread sexual, emotional and physical abuse.

The City of Victoria recently removed a statue of Macdonald as part of a reconcilia­tion process with First Nations. In Montreal, a statue of the first prime minister was painted earlier this month, with an anti-colonial group claiming responsibi­lity. A statue of Macdonald in Regina was also recently splashed with red paint.

Kingston, where Macdonald grew up and worked for years, has also seen protests related to the former prime minister, particular­ly around events that celebrated the bicentenni­al of his birth in 2015.

“Kingston has a lot of work to do to contemplat­e its relationsh­ip to Sir John A. Macdonald,” said Laura Murray, an English professor at Kingston’s Queen’s University whose research has focused on Macdonald’s memory in the city. “I hope that Kingston is ready to really confront some of the serious effects that he had on Indigenous people.”

 ?? LARS HAGBERG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Starting next week, residents will get the chance to voice their opinions online and in person on Macdonald and his place in the city's history.
LARS HAGBERG THE CANADIAN PRESS Starting next week, residents will get the chance to voice their opinions online and in person on Macdonald and his place in the city's history.

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