National Post

A burden we all must share,

- Ken S. Coates Ken Coates is a professor and Canada Research Chair in Regional Innovation at the University of Saskatchew­an and the Macdonald-Laurier Institute’s senior policy fellow in Aboriginal and Northern Canadian Issues.

Residentia­l schools have been held up — appropriat­ely — as one of the most destructiv­e public policies in Canadian history. The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission summary report, released Tuesday, lays out for all to see the intensity of the residentia­l school experience and the long-term legacy of this ill-advised, colonial system of cultural destructio­n. The government of Canada got an idea about how best to deal with aboriginal people and stuck with it for generation­s, even in the face of mounting evidence of a tragic policy failure. It is ironic, therefore, that the Commission’s devastatin­g critique concludes that substantia­l, even sweeping, government policies and programs are required to set things right.

Surely the country can agree that a dramatical­ly different approach is required. But it is not clear that the 90+ recommenda­tions, which range from a national day of recognitio­n and public memorials to additional funding for the CBC, and nationwide educationa­l interventi­ons, will solve the problems so carefully documented by the Commission.

Real reconcilia­tion will have occurred when aboriginal people have comparable educationa­l outcomes, enjoy healthy and safe communitie­s, have access to decent jobs and experience a level of income and prosperity comparable to that of other Canadians. Of course it falls to government­s to provide the infrastruc­ture and basics services, at an equitable level. Changes to legislatio­n are required. Historical wrongs must be redressed.

But a government-driven system of new programs is not going to result in major improvemen­ts. Canada needs a broader societal challenge, in which the nation as a whole listens much better to aboriginal people and allows them to set their agenda and priorities going forward. There are better ways, in my opinion, to honour the legacy of residentia­l schools and the many other historical injustices that marginaliz­ed and impoverish­ed aboriginal people in Canada than by expecting the same political and administra­tive structures that created the problems to somehow solve them.

Fortunatel­y, real reconcilia­tion is within our collective grasp. The answer rests in getting on with the effort that aboriginal people and communitie­s already have under way, capitalizi­ng on their human resources, newly defined legal rights and regional economic opportunit­ies. Aboriginal communitie­s are increasing­ly carving out an equitable place for Indigenous peoples. And for the first time in generation­s, they have enough real power to determine the shape and nature of the socio-economic forces that defining their lives. Canada is adapting to Indigenous people rather than — as the residentia­l schools demanded that they do — the other way around.

This is where real and exciting progress is being made. Aboriginal business developmen­t is occurring apace. More Indigenous students are completing high school, college and university and finding prominent positions in the private sector, health care and government. More aboriginal economic developmen­t corporatio­ns are enjoying commercial success. More than 300 Indigenous communitie­s have signed collaborat­ion agreements with resource companies. Indigenous government­s and developmen­t corporatio­ns have hundreds of millions of dollars in investable assets and are exploring equity investment­s in hundreds of businesses.

Steady improvemen­t does not mean that the problems are solved, but they do show that aboriginal-led solutions work the best.

Reconcilia­tion is attainable in large measure because of the resilience of aboriginal communitie­s, a set of remarkable and determined leaders, and community-level collaborat­ions with businesses. Some government measures can contribute to this process, and these efforts should be accelerate­d. Government­s should focus on improving roads, water systems, school buildings, health-care facilities and the like, in aboriginal communitie­s. There is plenty to do on that score. From there, the country should turn authority and policy setting on aboriginal affairs over to aboriginal people and their government­s.

Other Canadians can participat­e by training and hiring aboriginal workers, establishi­ng joint ventures with aboriginal companies, patronizin­g aboriginal firms, supporting aboriginal investment­s — and insisting that Indigenous people have the same levels of basic support and infrastruc­ture as other Canadians. Sustained equality of opportunit­y in the national economy and society will produce the best aboriginal outcomes. This is a real foundation for reconcilia­tion. A country where aboriginal people have the political freedom and the resources to chart their own course, where they participat­e as equals with other Canadians, is the most appropriat­e response to the tortured legacy of residentia­l schools.

Canada’s political leaders should be moved to action by the TRC’s powerful document. Several recommenda­tions hold immediate appeal, particular­ly a nationwide commitment to aboriginal language revitaliza­tion, greater attention to the inclusion of aboriginal symbolism in public affairs, and the formation of a high-level committee to oversee and report on the effort. The residentia­l schools attacked aboriginal language and cultures. A national commitment, substantia­l, sustained and Aboriginal­ly-controlled, to preserving and revitalizi­ng Indigenous languages should be a top priority.

But we must not look to government­s, no matter how wellmeanin­g, to achieve real and lasting reconcilia­tion. The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission report explains why the weight of history sits so heavily on the shoulders of aboriginal peoples. It behooves the country as a whole to share that historical burden and to make it clear that there is both understand­ing and remorse about the residentia­l schools and related government programs.

The best way to get over the past and the legacy of grievous injustices is to create a shared and more equitable future, and to ensure aboriginal people have the resources and freedom to set their own path forward.

We cannot expect the same political and administra­tive structures that created the problems to somehow solve them

 ?? Sean Kilpat rick / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A woman in the audience is comforted during the closing ceremony of the Indian Residentia­l
Schools Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Wednesday.
Sean Kilpat rick / THE CANADIAN PRESS A woman in the audience is comforted during the closing ceremony of the Indian Residentia­l Schools Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Wednesday.

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