The Scotsman

We must not erase Scots’ colonial past

-

Removing references to Sir John A Macdonald, founder of a united Canada, from Scottish Government websites is ludicrous and a little bit sinister.

Like text books, official websites should not be devoted to glorifying significan­t individual­s but to telling the truth. If the truth becomes inconvenie­nt, concealing it should not be the response.

If Macdonald was historical­ly significan­t and strongly connected to Scotland last year then he remains so this year. The grounds for his legacy attracting controvers­y may mean the narrative needs updated – not erased.

Macdonald was born in Glasgow, his father from Rogart and mother from Craigellac­hie. The family emigrated in 1820 when he was five years old.

He went on to be the principal architect of the Canadian confederat­ion – by any standard, an act of historic importance which kept Canada separate from the United States.

Macdonald’s career seems to have been a mixed bag of vision and skuldugger­y. He was Prime Minister when “indigenous schools” were founded. T

These have long been discredite­d though they continued until the 1960s. His treatment of indigenous people has generated recent attacks on his historical status.

Far from writing him out the script, the nature of Macdonald’s career should make him feature more prominentl­y in his native land for it introduces us to some home truths about the part played by Scots in colonial history – sometimes for good, sometimes for ill. A society which relies on “wha’s like us” mythology – while thinking it can erase the bad stuff by not mentioning it – is unlikely to have any more regard for objective truth in the present than in the past.

 ??  ?? Glasgow-born Sir John A Macdonald has been erased from Scottish Government websites
Glasgow-born Sir John A Macdonald has been erased from Scottish Government websites

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom