Toronto Star

Reconcilia­tion requires empathy, Sainte-Marie says

Songwriter-activist says healing a shared road requiring patience and compassion from both sides

- FADILA CHATER

HALIFAX— The road to reconcilia­tion must include empathy and patience from both Indigenous and non-Indigenous people, famed singer-activist Buffy Sainte-Marie said Tuesday as she touched on a legacy of racism she has been fighting much of her life.

The award-winning songwriter told a Halifax audience that decoloniza­tion is a shared effort between the descendant­s of European settlers and Indigenous people, and Indigenous people should teach others about injustice in a compassion­ate and noncombati­ve way.

Indigenous people need to understand that much of “settler racism has to do with not knowing,” she told the sold-out crowd.

In effect, Sainte-Marie said people in conflict should treat each other as if they were children and didn’t know about Canada’s painful history of Indigenous relations.

“Don’t devalue people because of their immaturity or their lack of knowledge: That’s what you’re there to remedy,” Sainte-Marie said in an interview with The Canadian Press. “You’re there to teach, not to scold.”

The celebrated Indigenous singer issued the appeal before a presentati­on ceremony at Dalhousie University, where she received an honorary doctorate of laws.

“Even though things have changed a lot, the good news about the bad news is that more people know about it now,” she said. “It’s going to take compassion and empathy and good hearts in both communitie­s to ripen Canada into the way it could be.”

The singer, who now lives in Hawaii, reflected on her long journey to draw attention to the plight of Indigenous people.

“It took 50 years for the general public in Canada to address these issues,” she said. “I think a lot of people have been on the edge of understand­ing.”

Sainte-Marie, who is also an educator, offered a lesson she learned from many years as an activist: “Wait until the buffalo chips have dried.”

In other words, she said, patience will heal all wounds, and bitterness and guilt should be allowed to dry out.

“There are ways to decolonize that go far beyond the imaginatio­ns of defensive or fearful people.”

“I’ve been dealing with these issues my whole adult life and, you know what, it hasn’t killed me yet,” she said.

Sainte-Marie, who was born on the Piapot Plains Cree First Nation reserve in Saskatchew­an, gained fame for her folk music in the 1960s that addressed issues plaguing Indigenous people, including lack of access to education, civil rights and social genocide.

She also made regular appearance­s on Sesame Street, and founded the Nihewan Foundation for American Indian Education as well as the Cradleboar­d Teaching Project.

Sainte-Marie won an Oscar for writing “Up Where We Belong,” a song performed by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes for the film An Officer and a Gentleman. In 2010, she and rocker Bryan Adams were among the recipients of the Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards for lifetime artistic achievemen­t.

“Sainte-Marie’s career is a category of firsts,” Kevin Hewitt, Dalhousie’s chair of the senate, said in his introducti­on of the singer.

Tuesday’s forum was part of Dalhousie’s 200th Year of Belonging, an initiative that aims to generate discussion about inclusiven­ess on the university campus.

 ??  ?? Singer Buffy Sainte-Marie spoke at Dalhousie University’s Year of Belonging initiative.
Singer Buffy Sainte-Marie spoke at Dalhousie University’s Year of Belonging initiative.

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