The Agenda with Steve Paikin (Audio) - Lessons from Canada's Journey to Reconciliation
Episode Date: June 20, 2024As Canada marks National Indigenous Peoples Day, what lessons can be drawn from this country's experience with reconciliation, reckoning with residential schools, and treatment of Indigenous people? F...or insight, we welcome: Deborah Parker, CEO of The National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition; Chief Robert Joseph, Ambassador Reconciliation Canada; Kaila Johnston, Director of Education & Public Programming at the National Centre of Truth and Reconciliation at the University of Manitoba; and Karyn Pugliese, editor-in-chief of Canadaland.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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As Canada marks National Indigenous Peoples Day, what lessons can be drawn from this country's experience with reconciliation, reckoning with residential schools, and our treatment of Indigenous people?
Here to discuss, we welcome, on the line from Tulalip Tribes, Washington State, Deborah Parker.
She is the CEO of the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition.
In Vancouver, British Columbia, Chief Robert Joseph,
Ambassador, Reconciliation Canada.
In Winnipeg, Manitoba, Kayla Johnston,
Director of Education and Public Programming
at the National Center of Truth and Reconciliation
at the University of Manitoba.
And with us here in studio, Karen Pugliese,
who's the Editor-in-Chief of Canada Land.
And we welcome Karen, you back to our studio here and to our friends in Points Beyond. And with us here in studio, Karen Pugliese, who's the editor-in-chief of Canada Land.
And we welcome Karen, you back to our studio here and to our friends in Points Beyond.
I want to start by just reading something that Cindy Blackstock, the well-known executive director of First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada, she wrote this in
an op-ed for the Toronto Star.
The U.S. was the birthplace of the residential school system, but it was Canada that took the first steps towards truth and reconciliation. That's not because of bold
government action. It's because courageous residential school survivors sued the Canadian
government and the churches that ran the schools and eventually forced the creation of the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission. The subsequent TRC report included 94 calls to action,
a plan for Canada to learn from the past while addressing contemporary injustices.
The U.S. is now looking to that process as a guide.
So let's start there.
Deborah Parker, is that accurate?
Are you, in fact, looking to Canada as an example of what you might want to do in the States?
Yes, actually, for years, the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition has been meeting with Canadian First Nations and representatives to to learn more about how the TRC was conducted.
And what are some of the learning lessons that we can take here
in the United States. But I also had the honor of serving in British Columbia, the Tsleil-Waututh
Nation, Squamish and other allied nations on their TRC, Aboriginal Healing Foundation program.
Kayla Johnston, if in fact the TRC process in Canada is something that Americans
are looking at, what do they need to know about how that went? When it comes to the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission, as quoted by Cindy Blackstock, it was really the survivors who led
the ground and led the way starting from the 1980s onwards as they were coming forward and with that you'll
see from the 1980s to when the trc really started to get going in 2010 that's a couple decades of
work that needed to be done with those consultations with survivors with the churches
with the government offices and other representatives to really get a sense of how
best to address the outstanding litigation but all
those other components connected to it as well from the statement gathering piece but also in
addition to that the healing funds and i'll say healing for intergenerational survivors is really
now coming forward since the close of the truth and reconciliation commission and the wrap-up of
some of those other components of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement. So there's quite a lot of lessons that can be learned
in the preparatory phase of doing some of that work. But again, that key piece is being led by
the survivors and having that survivor voice to really identify what's needed when it comes to
the U.S. context. Chief Joseph, what would you add to that in terms of what our American friends need to know
if they intend to look to our process as an example? I think what would be, oh, greetings,
first of all, everyone. I think it would be really important to note that survivors indeed
were central to all of the evolution of the truth-telling process.
And to that extent, what the PRC became was a conduit for survivors to tell their stories in public to everyone
so that all Canadians were able to hear these stories firsthand. Of course,
that was really important. But just as important, a few years preceding the Truth Commission,
there was a healing movement across Canada driven by the Aboriginal Healing Foundation.
And it existed for a few years and survivors met in healing circles across the country continually.
And so before we even got to the forward when they're thinking about truth commissions,
to have survivors be able to communicate to each other and to the world their issues,
and so that they have an understanding and they're more ready when there actually becomes a formal truth and reconciliation commission.
actually becomes a formal Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
I'm really happy to say that because of that, here in Canada,
the Truth Commission report has had a huge impact. All elements of society and just about everyone knows about the history of residential schools,
Just about everyone knows about the history of residential schools,
now understands the history of Aboriginal people,
and many are getting on board and thinking about how they're going to engage in reconciliation with Indigenous people in Canada.
Going to follow up on that in a second, but first I want to give Karen a chance
to weigh in on that first question. What do you think?
What can Americans... Oh, I think a few things um actually I'm really glad the chief uh mentioned the Aboriginal Healing Foundation that that base work was so critical
before going into a reconciliation process and um what a lot of people don't remember is that there
was actually by the time the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Canada
started, there had been a delay and the Aboriginal Healing Foundation was running out of funding and
the government did not renew that through that process. And so it really became a burden of the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission to take on health, like mental health care for people who
were giving testimony because we'd lost that other piece, which I think was a big miss on the part of government.
I think the other thing, just as people have alluded to, is it wasn't like a one-step process.
It was pushing and pushing from the survivors.
There were individual cases, and then they were allowed to do these class action lawsuits.
They pushed the class action lawsuits.
They got a statement of regret, not an apology initially.
They got the alternative dispute resolution process,
which was very flawed
and wasn't properly compensating survivors.
And they had to keep pushing.
So this was like a process of trial and error
over and over again.
And really not a very reconciliation-y feeling process
or something that was about reconciliation, ultimately.
Reconciliation-y? That's a new...
I'm allowed to reinvent words.
I think you just did. I'm pretty sure you just did. Okay.
Kayla, let me now, as promised, follow it up on what Chief Joseph just had to say.
Namely, it's been almost a decade since the TRC concluded its work.
And I wonder if you could sort of tell us in your judgment,
how many of those 94 calls to action have in fact been implemented?
When it comes to the calls to action, it sort of depends. I use four different sources to keep up
to date on the progress. And it's a little bit subjective as to which calls
to action have been addressed and which haven't. Right now, Indigenous Watchdogs has 14 have been
addressed. But if you look at the types of the calls to action that have been addressed, and this
has been a criticism, it's a little bit like the low hanging fruit, and none of the calls to action
that require substantial structural changes to our systems like the child welfare system the justice
system and the like have been really addressed so the heavier ones that could lead to substantial
changes in that relationship between indigenous and non-indigenous peoples haven't been addressed
and that's one of the biggest criticisms that over the past three years since the to Kamloops
announcement we haven't seen any real major progress except for
the calls to action numbers 15, 80, and 94 have been addressed. So related to Indigenous languages,
a statutory day for the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, and an amendment to the
citizenship oath. Since then, it's been a lot of grassroots organizations or community-level progress on the calls to action.
Chief Joseph.
So I wanted to add that all of us have different indicators for measuring progress in truth and reconciliation,
in the truth and reconciliation process
uh one one of the really important indicators should be how survivors have responded to the
truth and reconciliation commission in their efforts first of all to reconcile their lives our lives because we up until this point we've we've
had a trauma that was deeply hidden and we didn't understand it but now across the country indigenous
people are continuing to heal they're proud they're strong they're resilient, they feel free, they're hopeful, and you can't measure that against the 94 calls to action.
As important as the 94 calls are to action, we have to make sure that the dialogue continues between survivors,
between ourselves, and with the Canadian public.
That's so important to do, to maintain the dialogue. That's the only time
change happens when we have deep discussion that transforms our ideas, our perspectives,
our hearts, our minds, our souls. This Truth Commission needs to be a deep run at it. It has to have a powerful spiritual element that drives us to continue
day after day after day, even sometimes with the disappointments that we have.
Karen, I wanted to get your take based on your reporting of how people in the Indigenous world
feel either satisfied or frustrated at how much or how little of those
TRC recommendations have actually been implemented? Well, you just summed it up so beautifully. That's
exactly how people feel. They feel good and bad and frustrated and happy. I mean, it's not just
about the, like, it's about the TRC recommendations, but it's broader than that. I mean, I think the
first thing is the TRC started very much with residential schools, and it's broader than that. I mean, I think the first thing is the TRC started
very much with residential schools, and it had a very narrow mandate. But the commissioners took a
look at one of the phrases in there that said anything out of residential schools that affected
Indigenous people. And that's how you get to child welfare. That's how you get to missing and
murdered Indigenous women. That's how you get to UN DRIP and Land Back
and all these other things that are important.
I think two things have happened over the years.
One is, as the Chief alluded to,
there's been a real, like, awakening of our people,
especially the youth.
And so their expectations are so much higher.
Like, I used to be considered kind of a radical,
and, you know, I'm old and it's boring well no
no no but okay you know the kids are are um and i say kids i'm getting old um but the kids their
expectations are very high and so even though we're seeing probably like realistic realistically
like what's been one of the better relationships with the federal government, despite a couple of land back movements and problems there. But overall, it seems like the
chiefs and the governing bodies seem to be getting along pretty well with this government. But the
expectations are just so much more and for change and sooner, sooner, now, now.
Deborah Parker, I wanted you to hear those three responses before going to you,
because as you embark on this process, I wonder whether what you've heard makes you
more confident or more concerned, or whether you're prepared for
what undoubtedly will be the travails to come as you embark on your journey on this.
What do you think?
come as you embark on your journey on this. What do you think? Well, I just want to thank our First Nations relatives for sharing their truth. And I do believe that this should be survivor-centered
work. And so here in the United States, that's something that we are working towards to make sure
that boarding school survivors, residential school survivors have the opportunity to help lead this work.
And hearing from our First Nations elders and chief, it is so important.
And I should say young elder, too.
I should say young elder, too.
It's so important to hear this journey because we've been trying to bring about truth and healing here in the United States for many years, and it's been difficult. in House Resolution Bill 7227 so that we could create a U.S. Commission on Indian Boarding
Schools and learn from those lessons of how difficult it was for residential school survivors
to obtain records of where their family members are, where they were buried, where they were sent
to, where they were trafficked to. And so that's something that we've been working with
our congressional members.
And it's exciting to say that we,
last week in Washington, D.C.,
we just moved forward on the House side.
We passed through the Education and Commerce Committee.
And so we still have to go to the main floor and then go on to the Senate side and pass the bill.
But we look forward to journeying down this road so that we can find those pieces and find out where our relatives are, find out where the records are.
We know the government and churches have those records.
So that's kind of
our first step is let's find out the truth. And Debra, let me do a quick follow up with you in
as much as the Interior Secretary in the Biden administration is, as we would say in Canada,
indigenous, as I guess you would say, Native American. And I wonder whether you think
that helps the process move along? Oh, absolutely.
Having U.S. Secretary Deb Haaland
lead the efforts in finding out the truth
about the U.S. boarding school era
is absolutely paramount.
She's from the Laguna Pueblo.
And so her experience and understanding
of the boarding school issue
has helped lead our efforts across
the nation. So we know we feel like we're many years behind Canada in the sense of bringing out
this the issue of the better the federal Indian boarding school but we feel with the leadership
of Secretary Holland we've made some some greatides. And we're also looking for her second volume
to come out on Indian boarding schools.
And we know that our children are also buried
across the nation in unmarked graves.
So we are really working hard to make sure families
find their relatives and that we can bring some healing
and some closure to some of those disappearances.
Chief Joseph, we Canadians are just sanctimonious enough to think that we are leaders in the world
at whatever it is we set our minds to.
And so I wonder if you could tell us whether you agree with the notion that many Canadians will feel
that we are sort of ahead of other countries when it comes to reckoning with our
past. What do you say? Yeah, I think there's some truth to that. We all respond to these
issues in different ways. I think Canada, by consequence, I don't know if this long-term plan has evolved in this process rather well, I would consider,
because so many things have changed as a result of apologies, creating a healing foundation,
then a truth commission, and then having national hearings where everybody knows the issue.
In our country here in Canada, most Canadians probably know about residential schools.
And to all of them, there's a twinge in their conscience that says
they should be considering doing something about it or responding to it but i i i absolutely know that when our neighbors
to the south begin this process as they have that they're going to succeed that if you stand up and
you tell the truth people hear you and all people who live in these countries now know that we need to find a way to do better, to elevate all of
ourselves to a place, to places where every child matters, everybody matters, we all belong,
and we should live together in peace and harmony. Kayla, you work with other countries in your
work. How do we fare compared to others on your scale?
When it comes to the NCTR, I'd like to say we are an international hub for countries who are looking to explore truth commissions, but also centers after truth commissions closed.
after truth Commission's closed most recently just this week we had two Norwegian visitors Norway had visited us in 2019 also this past two years we've had Ireland Brazil as well as a few other
countries come and visit us we've had about 11 or 12 and a lot of them are wanting to know how did
our truth Commission operate and then what was done after the Truth Commission closed what happened to all the materials all of the physical objects all of the statements and the
big piece really is ensuring the survivor voice how do we ensure the
survivor voice carries forward when it comes to that use of that materials in
our collection and really for our Center as an archive it's about the education
piece so supporting our educators
our researchers and the general public to ensure that this history is never forgotten or repeated
so a lot of countries are coming to visit and getting a greater sense and understanding of
how can they learn from our lessons and import them into their own efforts now for the United
States because there is the National Native American
Boarding School Healing Coalition, which we've worked with on and off for the past couple of
years, starting in 2017, I think there is a lot that can be learned and shared from some of our
own growing pains that we've had and what they can do to avoid that. And really having NABs established
first really sets the piece for that Future Truth Commission to gather those statements and have that security to know that they're going someplace safe to be protected, much like it's protected here at the NCTR in perpetuity.
I want to ask Karen Pugliese about something that has happened in greater numbers since the TRC reported, and particularly in the last few years, and that is Ryerson University is no longer Ryerson University. Sir John A. Macdonald
Law School at Queen's University is no longer Sir John A. Macdonald Law School.
There have been increasing efforts to change the names of places that many in the Indigenous world
find upsetting. And I wonder if there is a sort of consensus in the Indigenous world find upsetting. And I wonder if there is a sort of consensus
in the Indigenous world in Canada
about the advisability of doing that.
You know, it's interesting.
There is a bit of a debate that goes on.
And I actually, like, long before any of this,
there's actually a statue that's not there anymore
that was in Ottawa, and it was on Champlain,
and there was a native person kneeling
in front of them and the story goes that there was supposed to be a canoe and that's why the native
person was kneeling but they never got around to building the canoe because it would cost too much
um anyways people considered that offensive even back in the day and they they moved the uh the
Indian and placed him in a place with all the sweet grass and stuff and Champlain got to stay
there and there was a local photographer uh Jeff Thomas who took this great picture of the native and placed him in a place with all the sweet grass and stuff, and Champlain got to stay there.
And there was a local photographer, Jeff Thomas,
who took this great picture of the native in the new spot,
saying, why is the Indian the one that has to move?
Now, that debate that was happening at the time
is the same one I hear now.
Is it important to keep these things around in some way
and maybe put a plaque and put a reinterpretation on them
to show that people used to think this way.
You know, like statues of Native people
are often of fantasy Native people.
They're not of actual, like there's no statue of Karen.
There probably will never be.
But you know what I mean.
Like there's no statue of our national chiefs
or anybody who is like real.
Very few of them.
Maybe Louis Riel is one of the few
whereas for non-native people they're actually of people anyways pulling these down to what extent
it's not that it erases history but it it's interesting on the landscape to be able to go
and look at something and say well here's sir john. Macdonald, but here's the way we understand the history now, looking at it from our point of view and looking back. And that's one side of it.
And the other side of it is tear them down and put some statues of us up.
And where do you fall on that?
I think it's, I have mixed feelings about it. Like, I mean, I'm not really an activist. I'm
more of a journalist. So I might more like'm not really an activist. I'm more of a journalist,
so I might more like to engage with the conversation.
I see the value in both of them, to tell you the truth.
But I do think it says something about,
I think not doing anything is the problem.
Because when you hold people up who are very harmful and you don't say anything about it,
it's just sort of like, what do you value in society?
And how can you talk about things? Deborah Parker, let me get your view on that, because I think this issue has been
back in the news lately, that very famous statue of Abraham Lincoln with an Indigenous person
kneeling by him. There's a great debate now about whether that statue can stay or whether it has to
go or be contextualized with a plaque. Obviously, the stars and bars have come down in some state capitals and places in the United States,
although certainly there's lots of support still for the old Confederate flag.
What's your view on how all that should be handled?
Well, I'm definitely an activist at heart.
So if it doesn't bring joy and happiness, tear it down. Why keep something that doesn't ignite love and compassion and embrace people who are here today to bring about positive change in this world? And so coming together is so important as a human race.
world. And so coming together is so important as a human race. Well, I guess the, okay, you've asked the question and I guess the conventional answer is because if you make all these changes
and tear all these statues down, as opposed to leaving them there and contextualizing with a
plaque, you deprive people of understanding how people thought back in the day, how their views
have changed and what we're aiming to do better.
That's the argument. Well, I mean, I think in those places we can create gardens, we can create
places that that bring about happiness and change. That dialogue can still continue. But do we need
everyday references to colonizers or to people that hung our children or took our children in federal Indian boarding schools and beat us,
who passed policies that contributed to slavery and other ethnic cleansing?
So I don't know that I'd want to be reminded of that all the time, but certainly that's a part of history that we can continue to discuss
so that we don't continue those behaviors.
We must do better today with the resources and information that we do have.
Chief Joseph, do you think there is a consensus in the Indigenous world in Canada
about, for example, all of these renamings that have happened so far, and perhaps more
interestingly, all of the renamings that have not happened. You know, Wilfrid Laurier brought in a
thousand dollar head tax on the Chinese, you know, a century ago, and nobody's, at least not to my
knowledge, telling the university they got to change their name or etc., etc. What do you think? Yeah, I think when we hear about
or see these symbols, statutes or monuments
that if they represent colonialism in a bad way,
if they represent hatred and prejudice
and all of that kind of stuff,
I think I'm in favor of responding to those issues.
I'm not sure if you have to absolutely destroy the symbol or what,
but symbols are so powerfully important during times like we're going through right now
where people seem to be more interested in their own uniqueness or division
and we're more divided than we've ever been before even though we're undergoing the um reconciliation
process here in Canada and so it really does take a a lot of thinking and and some mutual dialogue between all of us to try to come up with solutions
on how to respond to those historical symbols of harm and hate or whatever.
So it's a process.
We're going to get through it one way or the other.
And it needs the kind of dialogue that's going on now for those pro and con for us those of us who
haven't given it much thought to get a grasp of what it all means and how it impacts us now how
it impacts our young people so it's going to be a process that won't be resolved overnight i don't
think caleb we've got just about a minute and change to go here.
And I wanted to ask you, I asked this next question to a lot of people, and most of them
like to dodge the question because it's uncomfortable.
So I'm, and it's about an Ontario issue.
And since you're in Manitoba, you can get away with answering it.
You won't have any consequences.
So here we go.
On the south lawn at Queen's Park, there is a statue of Sir Johnny MacDonald that has
been boarded up for about the last four years, mostly because the members of the Ontario legislature who are tasked with figuring out what
to do with that statue can't come to a consensus, can't come to an agreement on it. So the statue
remains boarded up. No one can see it. And it's, you know, it's kind of a monument right now to
indecisiveness. I guess my question for you is, what do you think we should do about that?
Love the difficult question.
That's why I asked you.
My youth, what do we do with those statues or the renaming of places when it's connected to,
for my youth, I say, what do we do about our problematic faves?
Those who've done very laudable things that we should recognize,
but also have these very serious components to it. Here on the Manitoba legislative grounds,
we have a statue to the famous five, including Nellie McClung, who is lauded for bringing the
votes to white women in the early 1900s. But we often don't talk about her very serious connection
to the eugenics movement and the forced sterilization.
So it's kind of a sidestep, not necessarily avoiding answering, but I really like all the
answers that have been given so far because it is about community. And the fact that it's still
boarded up brings a message. And whether or not it's uncovered or removed, I think it speaks
volumes that it's covered up and has that talking point to discuss why is
it like that? Why are we covering it up? And what are the discussions that can be had coming out of
that? Very similarly, also on the legislative grounds a few years ago, we had the tearing down
of the Queen Victoria statue. And we also had the beheading of another statue. And there were
discussions about whether or not it should be returned to the grounds, whether or not it's possible to be fixed, or if it should be moved to a museum in the state that it's in, in order to discuss that evolution or that journey that has taken place when it comes to these laudable figures who have that detrimental component to this history. And again, that learning opportunity. So I don't have
a right or wrong answer or a specific answer on what should be done other than continuing
discussion. And I like where it's going when it comes to those opportunities on how we can grow
from that. Continuing discussion is always a good idea. I knew you'd have a good answer to that
question. Deborah Parker, Chief Robert Joseph, Kayla Johnston, Karen Pugliese, I want to thank the four of you for joining us on
TVO tonight for a very stimulating conversation. Thanks so much to you all. Thank you. Thanks.
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