The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trudeau gifts former US embassy to Canada’s indigenous people

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OTTAWA: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday gifted a former American embassy directly across the street from parliament to Canada’s more than 600 tribes, in a symbolic rapprochem­ent with indigenous peoples.

He also ordered that a nearby building housing his offices be stripped of its name, Langevin Block, which is associated with the ‘cultural genocide’ of Canadian aboriginal­s.

The former embassy hand over on a national day celebratin­g the country’s aboriginal population “symbolises a turning point in Canada’s relationsh­ip with indigenous peoples,” a statement said.

“It provides a concrete marker, in the heart of the nation’s capital and facing Parliament Hill, of the importance of indigenous peoples to this country’s foundation, to its past and, most importantl­y, to its future.”

How indigenous groups will use the building is still undetermin­ed.

Suggestion­s include designatin­g it as a public space for aboriginal art and cultural events, or as a base for lobbying the government.

The 1930s Beaux-Arts building – designed by the same American architect who conceived of Washington’s neoclassic­al Supreme Court headquarte­rs – has sat empty for 19 years, since diplomats moved to a new building a few blocks away.

A former Liberal government planned in 2001 to turn it into a portrait gallery, but that idea was quashed by a subsequent Tory administra­tion.

Though the mahogany panel ling, marble walls and an original 1930s elevator are intact, the building will still need a full renovation.

There are holes in the walls and wires dangling from the ceiling, the result of demolition work done in preparatio­n for its use as a portrait gallery.

The Langevin Block, meanwhile, will be renamed the Office of the Prime Minister and Privy Council, Trudeau announced.

It was originally named for one of the fathers of confederat­ion, Hector-Louis Lang evin, who played a key role in the establishm­ent of church-run boarding schools.

Beginning in 1874, 150,000 Indian, Inuit and Metis children in Canada were forcibly enrolled in the schools in an integratio­n effort.

Many survivors alleged abuse by headmaster­s and teachers, who stripped them of their culture and language.

In a speech, Trudeau acknowledg­ed aboriginal­s’ “deep pain in knowing that that building carries a name so closely associated with the horror of residentia­l schools.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Metis dancers take part in an event announcing the creation of a new space for Indigenous Peoples at 100 Wellington Street, across from Parliament Hill, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. — Reuters photo
Metis dancers take part in an event announcing the creation of a new space for Indigenous Peoples at 100 Wellington Street, across from Parliament Hill, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. — Reuters photo

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