Vancouver Sun

Queen Victoria’s promise to First Nations takes centre stage in Bella Bella

- BETHANY LINDSAY

Long before Prince William was born, his greatgreat-great-great-grandmothe­r Queen Victoria presented a royal staff to a chief of B.C.’s Heiltsuk Nation.

The gift was said to be a symbol of the monarch’s commitment to helping Canadian aboriginal­s. On Monday morning, William and his wife, Kate, were shown the staff to remind them of that commitment as they visited Bella Bella, in the heart of Heiltsuk territory.

“The promises that Queen Victoria made to our ancestors mean a lot to our people today,” local resident Constance Tallio said after the community gathering.

She doesn’t believe the monarchy has kept Victoria’s promise to the Heiltsuk, but she was holding out hope the younger generation of royals would do more to promote the rights of indigenous people.

The biggest thing the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge could do would be to protect the environmen­t, Tallio said.

“This is very, very important to the Heiltsuk people, because our backyard is our breadbaske­t and without our salmon and our seafoods and our wild game, when they’re depleted, we don’t have anything,” she said.

“It’s really important that it’s saved and there’s no tankers or anything else that goes by.”

Conservati­on was the cornerston­e of the royal couple’s visit to B.C.’s central coast. The duke and duchess offered a royal endorsemen­t of the Great Bear Rainforest under the Queen’s Commonweal­th Canopy, which promotes conservati­on of indigenous forests. William told a small audience during the dedication that environmen­tal protection and collaborat­ion with indigenous people is a priority for the Queen.

“The Commonweal­th has, at its heart, always been about the values that bind as people,” he said. “When we protect our rivers, oceans, atmosphere­s and, like today, our forests, we are telling our children that their future prosperity cannot be disconnect­ed from the health of the natural world.”

This year, the Heiltsuk joined other coastal First Nations and the B.C. government in announcing an increase to the protected area, blocking off 85 per cent of the forest from logging. The rainforest spans 6.4 million hectares, and has been the subject of about two decades of protests and talks between First Nations and government. It’s home to towering trees, Pacific coastal wolves and the famed white kermode bear.

Kelly Brown, director of the Heiltsuk Integrated Resource Management Department, said that he was feeling optimistic about the future of the relations between the monarchy and First Nations.

“We think that through this visit, we can hopefully build on that relationsh­ip, that they can get more and more (connected) with the Heiltsuk people and their desire to reconcile, to make things right,” he said.

Wild, rainy weather prevented the duke and duchess from taking an aerial tour of the rainforest, and from participat­ing in a boat excursion through McLoughlin Bay, but they did manage a short walk into the woods to commemorat­e the occasion. The wet conditions meant all the rest of the day’s events were moved indoors.

But the weather didn’t deter a lone protester, Vic Gladish, who held up a sign reading “No pipelines — none” outside the hall where Premier Christy Clark and federal Justice Minister Jody Wilson- Raybould were giving speeches to mark the royal endorsemen­t of the forest. His message was meant for both federal and provincial government­s, he said.

“We don’t want any pipelines that are going to bring oil to the coast and to the Great Bear Rainforest,” he said.

Earlier in the day, Heiltsuk drummers and singers greeted the royal couple, and elementary school student Aryia Gladstone wore traditiona­l Heiltsuk regalia to present the duchess with a cedarbark bouquet. Dayton White was among the singers who welcomed William and Kate to the Wawiska Community Hall for the cultural celebratio­n.

“It was pretty awesome to have them here just for a little while and it was real nice to have everybody coming to Bella Bella that hasn’t been here before,” he said.

Local children also performed dances, including one entitled the Ladies’ Welcome, which was composed in 1986 for Expo.

Jenna Starr is a teaching assistant at Bella Bella Community School, and she came to the community hall to watch her students perform.

“It’s nice to see the kids all happy and excited. They’ve been talking about it for weeks and having practices down at the breakwater,” she said. “They did amazing. There’s a lot of kids that are very open with their culture.”

A common theme among members of the community was a love for Diana, Princess of Wales.

“We’ve been asked by many of our people to share with Prince William how much we cared for your mother,” Chief Marilyn Slett told the duke to enthusiast­ic applause. “She was a great humanitari­an, a world advocate … and she remains in our hearts.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Draped in traditiona­l First Nation blankets, Prince William, the Duke of Cambridge, and Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, look at a painted First Nations logo they were presented with during a welcoming ceremony at the Heiltsuk First Nation in Bella Bella on Monday.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Draped in traditiona­l First Nation blankets, Prince William, the Duke of Cambridge, and Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, look at a painted First Nations logo they were presented with during a welcoming ceremony at the Heiltsuk First Nation in Bella Bella on Monday.
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Duchess and Duke of Cambridge walk with Premier Christy Clark in the Great Bear Rainforest, now part of the Queen’s Commonweal­th Canopy, in Bella Bella on Monday.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Duchess and Duke of Cambridge walk with Premier Christy Clark in the Great Bear Rainforest, now part of the Queen’s Commonweal­th Canopy, in Bella Bella on Monday.

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