The Hamilton Spectator

City committee backing signage at monuments

- SEBASTIAN BRON SEBASTIAN BRON IS A REPORTER AT THE SPECTATOR. SBRON@THESPEC.COM

Hamilton’s emergency and community services committee is recommendi­ng council add interpreti­ve signage at contentiou­s monuments and markers to better explain their historical contexts.

The committee voted unanimousl­y Thursday to heed some recommenda­tions tabled in a report about how to address sites in the city while respecting Indigenous perspectiv­es and voices.

Among the recommenda­tions — which council will vote on next week — are hiring an Indigenous curatorial team and two Indigenous community liaisons, along with erecting interpreti­ve signage at five designated sites.

The “high priority” monuments and markers include:

■ The statue of Sir John A. Macdonald in Gore Park;

■ The statue of Queen Victoria, also in Gore Park;

■ The statue of Augustus Jones, a 1790s-era land surveyor who was born in the United States but loyal to the British crown, in Stoney Creek;

■ Monuments that commemorat­e the United Empire Loyalists, also in Stoney Creek; and

■ The Ryerson Recreation Centre — named for Egerton Ryerson, a 19th century Ontario educator whose work has been considered the framework of the residentia­l school system — near downtown.

Adding signage to the contentiou­s sites would “demonstrat­e respect and humility on the part of the city towards the Indigenous community and the public who are calling for more diverse narratives to be told through interpreta­tion and commemorat­ion,” the committee wrote in its report bound for council.

The recommenda­tions come days after Mayor Fred Eisenberge­r said the statue of Sir John A. Macdonald — in storage since it was toppled by protesters in August — shouldn’t stay hidden away.

“There are elements out there that want to eliminate all of these historical pieces and start from square one. I don’t think that has value,” Eisenberge­r said during an anti-racism event at city hall April 29. If the bronze statue of Canada’s first prime minister were to be reinstalle­d, he added, it would need a display explaining the controvers­ial figure’s history.

Macdonald played a prominent role in establishi­ng Canada’s government-funded, church-run residentia­l school system, which has since been labelled by the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission as an act of “cultural genocide” against First Nations, Inuit and Métis.

Last July, council shot down a motion to temporaril­y remove the statue and place it in storage pending an Indigenous-led review of city monuments and markers.

A month later, protesters tore the statue down during a rally of about 200 people at Gore Park. It’s been in storage ever since.

“The plaque that is (recommende­d) to go to Gore Park to educate the public is a great idea, but I’m against any proposal to erect the statue of Sir John A. Macdonald,” said Miguel Avila-Valarde, one of two delegates who addressed the committee Thursday.

Avila-Valarde — who was charged with mischief for his role in toppling the statue last summer — said he supports the recommenda­tions to add signage around designated monuments, but asked council to consider “putting them in museums so people can remember the good things in the past but also the bad.”

The committee’s recommenda­tions are based on a report by First Peoples Group, an Indigenous advisory firm which reviewed hundreds of monuments across Hamilton. Dubbed “Honouring Our Roots,” the report specifical­ly asked the city not to relocate or reinstall the Macdonald statue. Instead, its remaining pieces should be removed to allow space for a “reimaginat­ion of the site,” including a cleansing ceremony.

“These are the points I did not see in the (staff report),” said Lyndon George, executive director of the Hamilton Anti-Racism Resource Centre.

George said the committee’s recommenda­tions are “a path forward” to building deeper trust between council and Indigenous residents. But not heeding them would put those “consultati­on and relationsh­ip-building priorities at risk.”

 ?? BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? A city committee is recommendi­ng council add interpreti­ve signage at contentiou­s monuments and markers, such as the Sir John A. Macdonald statue in Gore Park. The bronze likeness was torn down by protesters last August.
BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO A city committee is recommendi­ng council add interpreti­ve signage at contentiou­s monuments and markers, such as the Sir John A. Macdonald statue in Gore Park. The bronze likeness was torn down by protesters last August.

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