The Hamilton Spectator

Read more about National Aboriginal Day

- BRAD BELLEGARDE AND TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was in vintage form as he took part in a ceremony marking the 20th annual National Aboriginal Day.

Trudeau attended a sunrise ritual Tuesday on the shore of the Ottawa River wearing moccasins and a buckskin jacket that the Prime Minister’s Office said was owned by his father, the late Pierre Elliott Trudeau.

The former prime minister was known in his younger years for donning buckskin before venturing out on canoeing expedition­s in Canada’s far north.

As the sun rose beyond a bridge linking Quebec and Ontario, the younger Trudeau was bathed with a ceremonial smoke as part of a smudging ceremony before paddling beneath the Parliament Buildings in a 10-metre cargo canoe.

The federal government began observing National Aboriginal Day on June 21 two decades ago.

This year, the tribute in the national capital region took place outside Canada’s Museum of History with several federal cabinet ministers and local MPs in attendance.

Trudeau didn’t speak publicly at the event, but issued a statement in which he encouraged Canadians to learn more about the country’s indigenous heritage.

“National Aboriginal Day is first and foremost an occasion to celebrate the fundamenta­l role First Nations, Métis, and Inuit have played — and continue to play — in shaping the identity of all Canadians,” the statement said. “Coast to coast to coast, their remarkable art and cultures, significan­t contributi­ons and history, are essential to our sense of nationhood.”

Trudeau also pointed to a rash of recent suicides in some aboriginal communitie­s, and the feelings of despair felt by some indigenous Canadians, as reasons for government­s to “better support the wellbeing of children and families.”

Elsewhere in Ottawa, the Senate’s Aboriginal Peoples committee opened its doors to 12 indigenous youth leaders from across Canada to hear their concerns about the future of their communitie­s, their families and their people.

Suicide has been a long-standing problem for aboriginal communitie­s, not a more recent phenomenon, said 18-year-old Shelby Angalik from Arviat, Nunavut.

“No one really likes to talk about it,” she said. “Suicide is what we go through all the time, not just now.”

The delegation ranged in age from 18 to 38.

Gov. Gen. David Johnston marked the day by visiting the Woodland Cultural Centre, a former residentia­l school in Brantford. The Mohawk Institute operated between 1831-1970.

The visit, Johnston said in a statement, would help “to better measure the impact that such institutio­ns have had on Aboriginal Peoples.”

In 2008, then-prime minister Stephen Harper apologized on behalf of the government for the multi-generation­al upheaval created by more than a century of residentia­l schools, which sought to assimilate aboriginal youth into Canadian society. The last residentia­l school closed in 1996.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau paddles in a voyageur canoe Tuesday on the Ottawa River following the National Aboriginal Day Sunrise Ceremony. He is wearing a buckskin jacket owned by his father Pierre Trudeau.
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau paddles in a voyageur canoe Tuesday on the Ottawa River following the National Aboriginal Day Sunrise Ceremony. He is wearing a buckskin jacket owned by his father Pierre Trudeau.
 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wears a buckskin jacket his late father Pierre Trudeau wore on canoe trips to the far North.
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wears a buckskin jacket his late father Pierre Trudeau wore on canoe trips to the far North.

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