Times Colonist

In the spirit of reconcilia­tion, let’s come together to discuss this play

- HEATHER MENZIES

A commentary by an adjunct professor in the School of Indigenous and Canadian Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa. She has been awarded the Order of Canada for her “contributi­ons to public discourse.”

I want to vehemently protest the abrupt cancellati­on of Wendy Lill’s play, Sisters, at Theatre Inconnu in Victoria last week.

As a writer who’s only recently taken up the challenge that reconcilia­tion poses to settler Canadians, I have long admired the courage and moral insight Wendy Lill has brought to her work.

She wrote Sisters well before the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission began to shed light on Canada’s shameful residentia­l school legacy.

In it, she took on the disquietin­g question of how ordinary Canadians could allow themselves to become instrument­s of colonial cultural violence: in this case, nuns associated with the Sisters of Charity who helped run the residentia­l school in Subenacadi­e, near where Wendy Lill lives in Nova Scotia.

The fact that she wrote this play with sympathy is part of her genius. Scene by believably excruciati­ng scene, she reconstruc­ts the harsh subjugatio­n of the 17-year-old novitiate Mary’s self and spirit to the harsh discipline­s of the convent.

She unflinchin­gly charts how Mary gradually lets herself embrace this, and then to start inflicting this same unfeeling discipline and abuse on the young Indigenous children for whom she’s responsibl­e at the residentia­l school.

It’s this personal account of an ordinary individual’s implicatio­n in the genocidal abuse that residentia­l schools represente­d that makes the performanc­e of the play, and the character of the old Mary looking back on her life so powerful.

For the play to be cancelled on the grounds that this sympatheti­c portrait “glorifies abusers” and “whitewashe­s colonial history,” thus making the play “racist” and “offensive” adds insult to the injustice of the decision.

I also protest how this cancellati­on came about: on the strength of an online outpouring of criticism and condemnati­on, a lot of it on Instagram, which in turn was acted on unilateral­ly by the theatre’s landlord.

As far as I know, none of these outraged people came to see the play, or to talk with the producer, director and cast.

I protest the insult not just to Wendy Lill. I protest the insult to the performanc­e team, both the director and the actors.

When I attended the opening night, Feb. 25, I witnessed their enormous courage, as well as talent, in fully inhabiting the uncomforta­ble roles Wendy Lill had written for them.

They didn’t pull any punches, especially the person playing the role of the older Mary. They all did Wendy Lill proud.

I want to issue a reconcilia­tion challenge of my own: that the people associated with the complaints that shut down the play come together with the producer and director, and perhaps agree to a special additional performanc­e either preceded by or followed by a dialogue in which all can participat­e.

 ?? B.C. MINISTRY OF TRANSPORTA­TION AND INFRASTRUC­TURE ?? Artist’s rendering of cantilever­ed, widened roadway proposed for the Goldstream corridor.
B.C. MINISTRY OF TRANSPORTA­TION AND INFRASTRUC­TURE Artist’s rendering of cantilever­ed, widened roadway proposed for the Goldstream corridor.

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