Toronto Star

Raising flags commits Canada to be better, O’Toole says

Pledge made Thursday to return federal flags to full-mast on Sept. 30

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole says hoisting the Canadian flag back up on Parliament Hill on the first national day marking the legacy of residentia­l schools should be seen as a sign of commitment to build a better country.

At a Friday campaign event in Mississaug­a, O’Toole doubled down on his pledge from Thursday night’s English-language debate to return federal flags to full-mast on Sept. 30, the National Day for Truth and Reconcilia­tion.

They have flown at half-mast at the Peace Tower and other federal buildings since May 30 after the discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves on the grounds of former residentia­l schools.

O’Toole said Orange Shirt Day, which honours children forced into the residentia­l school system, is an opportunit­y to recommit to reconcilia­tion and partner with Indigenous communitie­s to make “real progress.”

“I’m very proud of our country, despite the scars of our past,” he said, speaking outside a legion hall along the Credit River, an erstwhile fishing and trading route for the ancestors of the Mississaug­as of the New Credit First Nation.

“We will then raise our flag as a sign of that commitment of building a strong and better Canada in the future.”

Throughout the election campaign, O’Toole has stressed pride in Canadian heritage, a theme he drives at his rallies in tandem with military appreciati­on.

“If you don’t love and recommit to your country, are you really going to dig deep to make progress?” he asked.

O’Toole added that he has consulted with Indigenous leaders “literally every week or so” during his more than 12 months as Conservati­ve leader, but did not specify whether any of the conversati­ons concerned flags.

Manitoba NDP Opposition Leader Wab Kinew, who was an honorary witness to the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission of Canada, which heard testimonie­s from residentia­l school survivors, tweeted Thursday that the Canadian flag should fly at half-mast Sept. 30.

“The day is about the Survivors and their descendant­s … And those who never came home,” he wrote.

Assembly of First Nations National Chief RoseAnne Archibald said last week that leaving flags lowered continues to honour the lives of Indigenous children who died at residentia­l schools. If the flags were halfmasted for one day for every child discovered so far, it would take between 11 and 17 years for them to be raised again, she said.

Parliament hurried passage of the bill that created the statutory holiday in June after the discovery of what was believed to be the graves of 215 Indigenous children who attended a former residentia­l school in Kamloops, B.C.

At the time, Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault said the point of the national holiday was to create a chance for Canadians to learn about what happened in the residentia­l school system and reflect on the experience­s of survivors.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau rejected the notion that residentia­l schools are relegated to the history books.

“I think Canadians have seen with horror those unmarked graves across the country and realized that what happened decades ago isn’t part of our history, it is an irrefutabl­e part of our present,” he said Friday.

“I plan to keep those flags at half mast until it is clear that Indigenous Peoples are happy to raise them again.

“Unlike Mr. O’Toole, who will do it when he feels like it, I will continue to put reconcilia­tion with Indigenous peoples in the hands of Indigenous Peoples.”

Less than an hour later, O’Toole said Trudeau has offered only “positive words and promises,” pointing to the dozens of Indigenous communitie­s that lack access to clean drinking water.

Trudeau promised in 2015 to lift all drinking water advisories by this March, but the government acknowledg­ed last December it would not meet that goal.

As of Aug. 28, 109 long-term drinking water advisories have been lifted since November 2015, while 51 remain in effect across 32 communitie­s, Indigenous Services Canada said.

New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh has said symbolic measures such as lowering flags are important, but must not supersede other priorities, including improving living conditions for Indigenous communitie­s and locating more unmarked gravesites.

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Throughout the election campaign, Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole has stressed pride in Canadian heritage, a theme he drives at his rallies in tandem with military appreciati­on.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS Throughout the election campaign, Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole has stressed pride in Canadian heritage, a theme he drives at his rallies in tandem with military appreciati­on.

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