Windsor Star

Kingston takes down statue of Sir John A.

`Compromise' will see it erected at ex-pm's grave

- LIAM CASEY

A statue of Sir John A. Macdonald was lifted off its pedestal and hauled away from a park in his hometown of Kingston, Ont., on Friday.

Kingston's city council voted 12-1 this week to take the statue from City Park, place it temporaril­y in storage, and eventually put it up in Kingston Cataraqui Cemetery where Canada's first prime minister is buried.

The two-tonne statue has been part of Kingston's landscape since 1895, erected four years after his death.

Mayor Bryan Paterson says it was a difficult decision on a topic that has divided the community.

Macdonald is considered an architect of the country's notorious residentia­l school system that took Indigenous children from the families in an effort to assimilate them.

Paterson said the statue's move is a compromise that will not appease everyone.

“The hope is that with this compromise we signal to the community, one with very divergent views on this matter, that we're committed to continued dialogue about the legacy of Sir John A. Macdonald in Kingston,” he said in a statement.

“We recognize the pain that the statue inflicts on the Indigenous community in its current location, we understand the legacy of Sir John A. is complex, and we want to move forward in a way that encourages community, conversati­on, healing, and education towards the shared path of reconcilia­tion.”

Calls to remove the statue and rename a local school have grown steadily in recent years.

Those calls came again after the Tk'emlups te Secwepemc Nation announced last month the discovery of the suspected graves of 215 children at the former Kamloops Indian Residentia­l School in British Columbia.

In addition to the Kingston council's decision on the statue on Wednesday, a school board in the area voted unanimousl­y this week to rename Ecole Sir John A. Macdonald Public School.

The Limestone District School Board said Macdonald's name will be removed from the school by the end of the month and it will become known as Ecole Kingston East Elementary School in the interim.

The school's renaming process will begin in September, the board said.

“The board of trustees acknowledg­es the ongoing pain and harm related to the use of that name within our school communitie­s but particular­ly with Indigenous members,” board chair Suzanne Ruttan said in a statement.

 ?? LARS HAGBERG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A statue of Sir John A. Macdonald, which has been part of the Kingston landscape since 1895, is removed from
City Park on Friday. Kingston city council has also decided to rename a school named after Macdonald.
LARS HAGBERG / THE CANADIAN PRESS A statue of Sir John A. Macdonald, which has been part of the Kingston landscape since 1895, is removed from City Park on Friday. Kingston city council has also decided to rename a school named after Macdonald.

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