Toronto Star

Reconcilia­tion is about creating space for a beginning

- JAMES HOGGAN

“What does reconcilia­tion mean to you?”

I asked that question of Miles Richardson, a Haida leader, former chief commission­er of the B.C. Treaty Commission and a close friend since we started serving together on the board of the David Suzuki Foundation in 2001. I had recently come from a workshop discussion where I had earned criticism from an Indigenous leader for conflating reconcilia­tion with forgivenes­s. So, I was looking for an understand­ing of reconcilia­tion that was deeper and more nuanced than the dictionary definition: “the restoratio­n of friendly relations.”

Miles didn’t answer. I wasn’t even sure if he had heard me, and we were soon discussing something else. A couple of days later, he said, “Jim, I’ve been thinking about the question that you asked me.” And even as I was wondering what it was, Miles said, “. . . about reconcilia­tion.”

He went on: “If you can see me as I see myself, and I can see you as you see yourself, that is the beginning of a healthy relationsh­ip. And I’d like to see where a healthy relationsh­ip would take us.”

Two things struck me about this response. First, I was honoured — though, in hindsight, not surprised — that Miles had taken time to consider my question. It reminded me why we are friends; he is thoughtful, as well as wise. More important was the answer itself. Miles wasn’t trying to persuade me to agree with him. He was calling for mutual respect and empathy. He was trying to open up space for a higher-quality conversati­on.

This, in terms of the faltering processes of reconcilia­tion unfolding in Canada today, gets to a critical point. Reconcilia­tion is not something you pick off the shelf. It’s not a gift that one powerful party can offer another. It is the product of a trusting relationsh­ip. It doesn’t require agreement, but it demands a degree of understand­ing. And that foundation of trust and acceptance — of mutual respect — is not, in itself, the happy end point; it is a first, essential step in creating the space in which reconcilia­tion may emerge.

That gets to one of the biggest problems we now face. Too many people today are stressing and obsessing about all the ways the reconcilia­tion project might ultimately go awry. As Miles has said, reconcilia­tion is not about coming to a final verdict: it’s about respect. It’s about having integrity as a Canadian and a human. It is, again, about seeing the other as they see themselves and, critically, about being who you say you are.

The resolution of rights and title will take years to unravel, even once the journey to reconcilia­tion is well under way. But this first step demands an unpreceden­ted degree of openness. For example, Miles says, “I also have the view that my people are sovereign over Haida Gwaii. If you hope to understand me, you better understand that.” He’s not demanding that you accede, even if he’s quick to point out that his title is well defined in Canadi- an law. But, he says, “Reconcilia­tion entails respect, whether you agree or not.”

So the task now is to find the courage and integrity to take a first step — not to fear that, by reaching out, we might sacrifice a long-term negotiatin­g position or “give away” something that was built on denial of the basic humanity of our Indigenous neighbours — only that we seek a foundation of understand­ing.

In Miles’s words: “We’re agreed that we’re all here to stay.” Wouldn’t it be better, for the social, economic and environmen­tal security of all parties, to begin the next 150 years with the mutual respect that enables us to see where a healthy relationsh­ip takes us?

 ?? PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER DIRECTORS: ?? John Boynton John A. Honderich Chair Campbell R. Harvey Martin E. Thall Elaine B. Berger Daniel A. Jauernig Alnasir Samji Paul Weiss Linda Hughes Dorothy Strachan Daryl Aitken John Boynton Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. is a wholly owned subsidiary of...
PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER DIRECTORS: John Boynton John A. Honderich Chair Campbell R. Harvey Martin E. Thall Elaine B. Berger Daniel A. Jauernig Alnasir Samji Paul Weiss Linda Hughes Dorothy Strachan Daryl Aitken John Boynton Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. is a wholly owned subsidiary of...
 ??  ?? James Hoggan is the past chair of the David Suzuki Foundation Board and author of the book, I’m Right and You’re an Idiot: The Toxic State of Public Discourse and How to Clean It Up.
James Hoggan is the past chair of the David Suzuki Foundation Board and author of the book, I’m Right and You’re an Idiot: The Toxic State of Public Discourse and How to Clean It Up.

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