The Bridge with Peter Mansbridge - A Bridge Special on the Residential Schools Issue
Episode Date: June 28, 2021Feature interviews with the Minister of Indigenous Services and the Chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. How to navigate the road forward. And how to discover the truth. ...
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And hello there, Peter Mansbridge here with a bridge special on the residential schools issue.
Two conversations you really should listen to.
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Akana, go beyond the first ingredient. and hello there peter mansbridge here yes i know i'm supposed to be on a hiatus and i will be
very shortly but i'm the kind of guy that when news happens, when stories leap towards the forefront,
I want to be there for part of it.
And that's exactly what's happening on this bridge special
on the residential schools question.
As you heard over the weekend,
much discussion about the latest find, if you will, in terms of unmarked graves.
This time in Saskatchewan at the Merrillville Residential School, the former residential school, where in this case more than 700 unmarked graves were found.
The Kamloops situation where there were more than 200 unmarked graves found just a couple of weeks ago.
So this once again has the question, what do we do now? Two conversations for this special
edition of The Bridge. One with Justice Murray Sinclair, who was the man in charge, the chair
of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
His comments coming up a little later. First off, though, the Minister for Indigenous Services,
his name is Mark Miller. He comes from Montreal. He's a relatively young guy, just turned 50. He was first elected to the House of Commons in 2015.
He sat as a backbench MP for a while, then as a parliamentary secretary,
and then after the 2019 election, the Prime Minister put Mark Miller in the Cabinet
with responsibilities around the Indigenous services question.
Now, as I said, he's a young guy, grew up in the Montreal area.
He's been very committed to Indigenous issues before,
in fact, committed to enough to actually learn, in part, the Mohawk language,
which is one of the dominant Indigenous languages in the Montreal area.
So Mark Miller has been on a hot seat, if you wish,
on this subject around residential schools and the news that has broken over the last few weeks.
And so here, first off, is our interview with Mark Miller.
Well, Minister, by all accounts, you've had a pretty good relationship
with the Indigenous leaders that you deal with
since the Prime Minister put you in the job a couple of years ago.
How difficult has it been since Kamloops, since Merrillville and Saskatchewan,
since those two stories have gone public, for you to talk with those same leaders?
It's been very painful.
I think, you know, as Canadians are waking up
from this sort of collective amnesia or willful blindness,
whatever you want to call it,
it's an everyday lived experience for survivors and, um,
and successive generations that are getting triggered.
And so if you're in a position of leadership in that community, um, you're,
you're probably scrambling to figure out how you best put that voice of your
people that is in deep pain to, uh, to words or to, uh, or, or, or,
or from, you know, media requests. And I've heard a range of, of,
of thoughts and views and tears on this. And it's, it's,
it's a very, very difficult time for,
for Indigenous peoples across the country and not just those that have their
kids sent to Kamloops or ripped from the hands of their families to Kamloops
or, or in Calais or Brandon
or anywhere around the country, but for any Indigenous community,
for this reopening of wounds that they thought were closed.
So leaders are in a very, very difficult position
because people are looking to them for answers,
and the reality is there are far too few.
And that's, you know, all can do is as a minister of indigenous
services, non-indigenous
still very much learning on this file
is to be there for them
financially obviously we've said so
loud and clear this is a government that has
put large financial
supports to indigenous communities
but also
stand aside or behind these communities
as they take that difficult decision to figure out what they do with these sites that are both sacred and crime scenes at the same time.
So, you know, the views range from different ends of the spectrum of wanting to let things rest to wanting answers now.
But what we know, particularly in a time where there is this thirst for immediate
answers, is that this will take time. And I think that's what's frustrating for a lot of people.
Well, I can certainly see how difficult it is for the Indigenous leaders you're dealing with.
I guess what I'm trying to get at is how awkward is it for you? I mean, after all,
the federal government, as you have readily admitted, is partly to blame for this. So suddenly you're now in these discussions and you're kind of
accountable on the one side of this discussion. So it must make it awkward, at least,
to be involved in the discussion. Yeah. And look, I think most recently,
but some of the discussions i've had
with chief chemist delorme of calicis who readily and acknowledges that we've we are both inherited
this and are responsible for it absolutely um i'm new to this game i've been a minister for
less than two years for me it seems much longer because we've navigated a once-in-a-century pandemic.
That relationship that I've been able to build
over the last year has helped.
But, you know, it's very difficult for anyone
to be able to talk to someone who is grieving,
who has had relatives that have gone through this system
that are reliving this experience.
So I say clearly, as clearly as I can, that we're there for them.
And if you need us to get out of the way, we'll get out of the way.
If you need us to give you space, we'll give you space.
And if you need help, we'll give you help.
You know, maybe the silver lining in going through a global pandemic
where Indigenous communities, from a purely statistical perspective,
have done better perhaps than expected,
there's been a bit of trust that we've been able to build on.
So there is some positive in there.
Who should take the lead on this?
You know, because there is a conflict of sorts,
you know, who should take the lead in trying to move forward on this?
Yeah, and I don't want to be sensationalist on this,
but essentially you can't ask the federal government
or the perpetrator to investigate the crime.
It just goes against everything about proper investigations.
We are responsible for this.
The church is responsible for this.
But we do have to be a central turning point for resources help.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission is quite clear that the communities most affected by the particular residential school
have to be in a position to take the lead.
And for us, that means continuing to respectfully engage with communities.
And it can be, obviously, financial assets.
It can be, as you know, shutting down airspace in and around Kamloops
for the curious that have gone in with their drones to take pictures
and uninvited, or providing special forensic archaeological support
from the Canadian Armed Forces.
And then, depending on what the need is, whether it's commemoration
or investigations of crime scenes, to provide all the resources,
documentation that those communities need to get some sort of closure.
This is, you know, there's an exercise in accountability,
but before that there is most importantly an exercise in truth,
mostly for the survivors who are looking for closure.
I just add that, you know, there have been asks of a variety of ranges from UN investigation to federally led investigative process.
We can absolutely set something up, but it has to come at the direct request of those communities or a core group of communities with affected sites.
And are those requests coming in?
They're slowly coming in peter um what's coming in most consistently is that is our our needs in
and around supports um financial but also mental health supports for communities um long-term asks
around more mental health supports we're in the middle of not only the the tail end of a pandemic
that has been difficult on people's mental health but also an opioid crisis across the country
so those needs are even more pressing because these are sort of compounding triggers the tail end of a pandemic that has been difficult on people's mental health, but also an opioid crisis across the country.
So those needs are even more pressing because these are sort of compounding triggers.
But they do range, you know,
the requests that we have coming in are principally around reopening some
older investigations.
A lot of these communities have been doing these sometimes with their own
funds, sometimes with ours, not enough over time.
So it is something that does take time.
Kamloops, they had been working on it for decades.
The Mohawk Institute in Six Nations, for example,
has been looking at this ever since the school closed.
And they've had sort of fits and starts.
And this is always a very painful issue for the community to go through.
And people have different views within the communities,
nonetheless, the survivors.
So it's a range of things.
We're really, I would say, sadly, views within the communities nonetheless the survivors so it's a range of things um we're
really i would say sadly very much at the infancy of getting to that ultimate point which is one of
accountability can i just ask a a question on on the actual uh sites the unmarked graves. What is your view on what the end should be on that?
Do these bodies need to be exhumed?
Do they need to be identified?
Do they need some form of analysis on trying to determine how these mainly
children died?
You know, the answer that I'll give you is perhaps uncomfortable for people to hear,
but it's the fact that I don't know, and I don't think, more importantly,
communities have a full sense of where they want to go.
People want answers.
This is fundamentally a collective expression of pain that can take different directions, all natural, but somewhat unpredictable there.
I can share some of the views I've received.
One is one of commemoration.
One is in some sense honoring to achieve closure. One is, in some sense, honoring to achieve closure.
One is an exercise in getting more answers.
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission came up with a rough number of about 3,000 young souls that had perished.
That number could easily double.
And if you listen to the words of Marie St. Clair, it could go up to 15,000 and perhaps even more, depending on the site.
So in all that is a lack of knowledge-St. Clair could go up to 15,000 and perhaps even more depending on the site. So in all that is a lack of knowledge and clarity.
And I think there is a recognition that we won't necessarily get the entirety of the truth.
But there has to be more effort put into searching for it if the community wants it.
And on the other end of the spectrum, I've heard communities in a very painful way reach out to me and say, we want to let those sites lie.
We don't want to be digging up our ancestors as young as those souls were.
There are very many survivors that are in a position where they are trying.
They don't even want to relive those memories because they are so painful, but they are in a position of having to calm down their own youth who want those answers and it is there's nothing more difficult
than to be in one of those communities where um there is that range of views uh and some people
that are getting triggered i mean there is the search for the truth is a deep psychological
process but as many people know um repressing the truth is sometimes an act of self-preservation.
And that is something that we are reckoning with, and as we do in all things dealing with mental health in a government, we do so quite poorly.
So when you ask me that question, what do we do? I don't know.
I think certainly there's a quest for answers and a quest for closure. Any survivor that those that are courageous to speak about it openly
will say that there is a search for closure.
And then there's another process of accountability, all imperfect,
but ones that we can't give up effort on.
And I think that's where our government has a role to play,
albeit in the background, letting those communities lead.
You know, some believe that some of the answers,
some of the truth in this lies in documentation.
You mentioned documentation a moment ago, both the federal government and the Catholic Church, and we'll get to the church in Ottawa holds and that it's all being released or close to being released?
No, I don't know.
But I don't have, again, I don't have that answer either.
We know historically that tons and tons of documents were destroyed in the 30s and 40s.
And Health Canada, the health health departments also destroyed documents whether it
was conscious or an act of a document retention procedure gone awry um delivered or not those
documents aren't there anymore we know that that's been properly documented um a good chunk of the
documentation was turned over to the truth and reconciliationconciliation Commission in Winnipeg.
So there is a central repository for what is known and was largely documented in the various tomes of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report.
But it is incomplete.
There is a big piece of the puzzle that does lie within the churches, particularly the Catholic Church.
And that documentation is still outstanding to a large extent.
I don't think that when it comes to these egregious acts of murder or gross acts of negligence,
that that was meticulously documented.
But at the same time, I think there still is a good chunk of documentation that is outstanding.
I'm looking at my own ministry to see what our document retention policies are,
to see if there's anything left.
It just is a matter of clarity.
But again, in that search for truth, I don't know if we'll get to everything,
but I think there is a lot more work to do in not only looking at our own institutions, but pushing the Catholic Church in particular,
since it's been the target of this
with the lack of a full accounting and apology,
as well as some reticence in turning over documentation
in certain orders.
Now, I have seen progress in the last couple of weeks
with the Oblates in particular,
willing to turn over documentation.
But again, I think no one will be satisfied
until it is actually turned over and parsed through.
As for the church, the Prime Minister weighed in quite heavily
on Friday about the Pope and desiring that the Pope come to Canada,
make a formal apology.
I assume you're in agreement with that position. What do you think the chances
are of that actually happening? I mean, he says that
the Prime Minister says he's talked directly with the Vatican and with the Pope about
this. So they obviously know
the desire is there. What do you think the odds are of that actually happening?
I'm not holding my breath, but I
know that that outreach has been made and
it is long overdue. It is the last church
really to do a full and complete accounting. The Anglican Stats, the United Church has.
Would it make a difference?
Initially, I didn't think it would,
but I've heard from too many Indigenous groups about whether they are themselves
Catholic or not, the importance of acknowledging the harm done
and asking for forgiveness as really the starting point in an operation in closure.
And so I do take those words seriously.
There are many Indigenous groups who do not, or individuals who don't care,
but there are many who do care. And this is, again, an operation of acknowledgement of
harm done. And I feel that the fact that that has not been properly, fully
done in the proper way continues to
cause the wounds to fester.
I'm Protestant myself. I have difficulty speaking publicly about my faith
so I can imagine a lot of people have that as well. So calling it a church
goes against everything I would want to do publicly, but I do
feel this is a long time coming. There's no reason why this hasn't been
done. And fundamentally it isn't an issue, I believe, with the Pope
himself, but internal politics within the Catholic Church that lies squarely within the
Council of Bishops in Canada.
That's interesting. You think the Pope if he had totally
his own way would be here doing this? Making an
apology? I believe so. You know I've
followed I believe so. You know, I've followed Pope Francis, at least with some, as intense as a casual that has had challenges dealing with the issues of the day.
I believe that has been solved for a number of political reasons within Canada.
I don't think those reasons, when I look at them at any level, are scrutiny acceptable.
What is your advice to Canadians who are clearly, many of them, I'd say the majority are clearly troubled by this,
in terms of what they should be thinking, what they should be doing.
And I guess more importantly, what's your advice to Canadians who either don't care
or who are in some form of denial?
I'm sure you've heard it and I've heard it.
A moment ago, you used the term murder as a possibility on a number of these cases.
And gosh, when that word is used, I know on my program, there's outrage from people who are outraged about this story.
But they say, hey, there's no proof of murder.
You know, it could be cholera.
It could be this.
It could be that.
And, you know, it's all wrong and it's all bad and it's unmarked graves and that's not acceptable,
but using that term is going, you know, a mile too far.
Well, there's documented stories in the Truth and Reconciliation Report.
I mean, it's funny that we're fundamentally the people
that write a whole heck of a lot of stuff down
but never remember anything.
The Truth and Reconciliation Report had detailed documentation stories,
and Indigenous peoples will tell you that their stories have been denied
and called all sorts of things that were just wrong.
And if you were to even believe a fraction of them,
you would inevitably come to the conclusion that murder was involved,
of course, negligence, reckless endangerment,
any legal term in the book that you'd want to throw at them.
There's no excuse to say that the Spanish flu or tuberculosis
was a hiccup of history, or that religion was a hiccup of history,
for that matter.
Clearly, in Egerton Ryerson's treatise,
the religion was used to cleanse
the quote-unquote Indian
from the person.
When it comes to tuberculosis
in Spanish food, the living conditions that were
imposed as well as starvation, well documented
were
an act of systemic racism.
Tuberculosis
behaves in a way that
any disease would which is which means
it spreads in closed conditions and that's the horrible living conditions these people lived in
and they were treated with neglect while they were in these schools so these are all part and parcel
of um of a plan to turn people into something that they weren't in our image.
And that is something we need to reckon with.
You know, I look back at my own ignorance.
This certainly wasn't taught to me in school.
I can imagine prior generations that it wasn't either.
In fact, I know.
But I do see it in current generations in school. My own children have told me about what they're
being taught. So I do have hope. I am
conscious of the fact that as non-indigenous Canada
and parts of non-indigenous Canada are waking up from their collective amnesia, that
grief cannot be there for a layer of people that are already grieving and ask them
to bear it for us.
I think we have a duty to continue to educate ourselves.
And that's a very painful thing because we do have, I love my country.
I love what I believe my country would be.
But as you read these reports, you say to yourself, what is that identity?
What is it believe? And that reckoning is quite painful,
particularly as we approach a day that lots of people have to celebrate, Canada Day.
So we continue to have a job to educate ourselves.
Again, far too often that education process has been on Indigenous peoples
to continue to remind us of what's gone on and what they live through every day,
whether it's interaction with the police,
whether it's interaction with the healthcare system whether it's interaction with the healthcare system
as a current ongoing lived experience.
Those are things that we suddenly express collective outrage
when we see the most egregious iterations
that are at the front page,
but it's a daily lived experience for many Indigenous peoples.
And that's a learning process
that I was completely oblivious to growing up.
You mentioned Canada Day.
You know, there are some communities in the country
that aren't going to celebrate it this year
because they feel, you know, at best awkward
over this situation and what it says about us
as a country and perhaps we aren't quite
what we thought we were as a result
of finding these stories out.
Where are you on that?
Do you acknowledge the fact that some just don't want to celebrate
in the way we have in the past?
Yeah, I get it.
I mean, I wonder if I spend Canada Day in a pretty, you know, I'll do a parade or so.
And, you know, most of us turn on Corey Harder.
I listen to Celine or Shania.
So perhaps it's time to turn the volume down a bit and start to reckon about where our country really is.
I think it's, you know, everyone likes a good celebration.
But the reality is there are people in this country that are hurting and suffering. We have to recognize that, particularly with the very, very
acute events that have been publicized
over the last month. So it is a time for reflection. I do believe, though, that
as a country, it is a sign of maturity that you can look at yourself and say, hey, we're not
we need to start rethinking about what we are and what we've done
and how we move forward together.
I don't think this is necessarily an exercise in examining polar opposites.
I don't think necessarily we need to turn this into a battle against quote-unquote cancel culture because we have people that are really, really hurting.
And this is a time of year where some people would like to go out and watch the fireworks, listen to music, and eat a hot dog.
But it is a time for me that I will spend reflecting with Indigenous groups that will ask to spend some time and discuss this with me.
And that's what I were to give a recommendation to anyone wanting to celebrate Canada, it's to take a moment and think about what you are, what we are as a country, and then obviously how we move forward.
You've mentioned Murray Sinclair a number of times, and obviously his report, which is now six years ago.
I'm going to be talking to Maurice Sinclair a little later
in this hour for a moment.
His report came down, there were 94 recommendations
or calls for action is what he called them,
for us as a country to follow if we were going to head
towards some form of reconciliation.
You know, there are different verdicts on how much of that 94
is actually being followed or is being worked on
without going through the list.
What's your sense of how much of those calls for action
have actually been taken?
You know, there's a lot of them they're they're not in a sense all identical and unequal there
are ones that require long-term action and reform and i think foremost the stuff that i
my ministry has to work on child and family services and that is one where we've passed
the law but the work and the reform continues as well as some very painful lawsuits that are immensely complex.
If you look at the ones that are of the direct federal government's responsibility, which they aren't all, obviously, the apology from the Pope is not something the federal government can do itself.
It can certainly influence.
The rule we work with is that 80% of them are underway.
There are a number that have completed the citizenship oath most recently.
The passing and royal assent of the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People.
Very, very important. So I guess, you know, in a month where it's very difficult to think about reconciliation without continuing to focus on the truth,
the reality is that this has been slow,
but ones that we continue to work on, and the Prime Minister made that promise.
It is a promise that he still continues to reiterate, but it isn't without realizing that there have been challenges in getting them done.
But the ones that underscore how difficult they are, I mean, one of the most insidious forms of legacies of colonization is the continued discrimination in and around the socioeconomic
gaps that I am tasked as part of my mandate to close. That's gaps in education, gaps in
infrastructure, gaps in healthcare. And those were on display during this pandemic where we
mobilized the armed forces, billions of dollars to help Indigenous communities kind of get ahead
of the curve.
And when it comes to vaccination levels, they stay ahead, particularly in second doses.
But it doesn't change the underlying factors that created that.
And that continues to be an insidious form of violence in this country that we have to
continue to close.
This government has tremendously put tens of billions, I think, I don't know the tally,
but we're north of 40 to continue to close those gaps, and they're closing.
But the progress is always slow. Indigenous language
vitalization, where that test is measured in generations
and not four-year electoral cycles, are ones that we'll have to continue to invest in.
I'm very proud of the language laws that we passed in
the end of the last mandate,
but that will continue to require investments in it,
and the test of the vitality of a language is measured over 10 or 20 years
and not sort of before your electoral cycle.
So those are ones we continue to work on,
and I'm actually proud that the Prime Minister continues to invest and reinvest in this,
and it's a lot of political capital. It's a lot of financial capital.
But I think it's what Canadians fundamentally want us to do.
I've only got a couple of minutes left.
Two questions.
You mentioned about how your kids are learning things at school on this issue,
which is good because you and I both know there's been generations
who never did, never heard anything about this.
If you could write a sentence,
a sentence or two at most on what reconciliation looks like,
what would that be? it's been because I get long answers
so you put me on the spot to try and
I always go back to what
my close friend
Michael Cloud said to me
when I was
when I was
main minister and that is
he looked at me and said,
it would be fine if you shut up and listen.
And I've taken that to heart.
I think we need to listen more.
And that isn't an exercise in being passive.
It's actually very difficult for a politician.
We live and die by the words that come out of our mouths.
Listening and understanding will, uh, will move us forward more than, more than empty words. And I,
and I take that to heart in any engagement that I have with as painful as it is
with indigenous people. So I don't know if that's one sentence, Peter, but
Hey, it's good advice.
It's good advice for a lot of people on a lot of different things.
Here's the last question.
And, you know, I'm sure you've been asked at times this before,
but I've always found it a puzzle of somebody who spent half a century,
which is only a third of our history, you know, covering this story in
many different places and having lived in remote parts of northern Canada, you know,
I've seen it close up.
But here's the question.
Can, or let me put it a different way.
Why do you think we've never had an Indigenous Affairs Minister?
And is that right?
Is that a wrong in itself?
Yeah, and it, you know,
I can't imagine the weight that would be on someone's shoulders that would be asked to do this.
I know most recently that was a position that was offered
to the former Minister of Justice and Attorney General Joey Wilson-Raybould. I just remember
General Butts' acknowledgement
that he hadn't appreciated
the depth of what that meant
to her to do that
and the impact that it had on her.
So, you know,
you could be
the most resilient person in the world.
It is a lot to assume.
I've also heard requests that that person be Indigenous,
and we certainly saw the nomination of Secretary Holland in the U.S.
as really something that people on this side of the world,
Indigenous people really, really celebrated.
But the weight on her shoulder is immeasurable.
We've seen it in the op-ed that she published when we saw the camera story broke.
And she was brought to tears when we met her and we talked about this.
So this is something I see that in my staff, Peter,
the issues that they have to face every day going to work,
the ones that are indigenous is much greater and impacts them in much different
ways than it would impact a person like me. So, you know, tell you again, I don't know. Um,
I think one day perhaps that is, that is, that is,
if someone, if someone could do it and felt that they could make a difference,
I think it would be very, uh, it would be an act of, uh,
of healing for the country,
but that the way it was put on our shoulders or something like that is immense. It's the same thing I would, well, perhaps
the same thing for a Governor General. The post I occupy is one that
goes back to the 1750s. It
predates Canada, and to ask someone indigenous to assume that
would require a lot of work, and that
person would have to, I can't imagine what would go through their mind
if they were to say yes
things I see every day
I wouldn't say that at the same time
it sounds weird, I really love my job
but I can learn a lot more than anything else
but it is difficult
and even before
the once in a century pandemic
there are pieces in the ministry Ministry on a good day.
So, again, sort of mixed views on it.
It's a tough one because, you know, you run the risk in a way of,
and I don't mean you personally, I mean just generally,
talking about the weight on the on the shoulders of somebody um in a in being in that particular role it makes it
sound like you know it's kind of it's almost patronizing in a way to say they couldn't handle
that weight when others can um It's a tremendous responsibility
and it would be a difficult position
and there would be times of conflict on it.
It just seems to me that there's something missing there
when we talk about how important this ministry has been
and dating back to Confederation.
And yet at no time has it ever been.
I recognize that there was an opportunity in 2019 that was turned down
or 2018 or whenever that was with Wilson-Raybould.
But the fact is she didn't accept it.
And the fact is she's not the only Indigenous person
who ever could have, you know, perhaps accepted that responsibility.
But nevertheless, I appreciate your answer and the thoughtful way in which you gave it and on all the other issues as well that we've discussed.
I wish you luck.
I think all Canadians wish you luck on this one.
It's a tough one. And the heart is in the right place
I think on all those who are watching this story unfold
and all those who are obviously so directly
related and involved and
dealing with it on a daily basis. So once again, I thank you very much.
Thanks, Peter.
Appreciate it.
Thanks for having me on.
That's Indigenous Affairs Minister Mark Miller.
When we come back, Murray Sinclair. All right, part two of this special bridge special on the residential schools question and the developments that have occurred over the last couple of weeks and trying to map out what the road forward is.
Our next guest is Murray Sinclair. He really needs no introduction, former judge,
former lawyer, senator, and of course, he was the chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
He's in his Manitoba home, and we've reached out to try and get his sense of where we are on all this.
You know, I never like to give up titles,
even though I know it's kind of an American thing
where they keep their titles forever.
In Canada, we tend to drop them, but I think they're important.
So I'm going to call you Senator Sinclair.
I could call you any number of different things,
but why don't we start with Senator on this one. You set out a path for us half a dozen years ago
when the commission reported, and you can argue about how far along that path we actually are,
but where do you sense we are on the path forward what do we still have to accomplish
well you know it's uh it's it's like when you look at the calls to action you can see that
we set out in the first uh two dozen calls to action what we saw as immediate needs that had
to be addressed before we could actually move into the bigger conversation about reconciliation.
But that didn't stop us from having to look at developing the groundwork for those long-term needs,
such as a council for reconciliation and looking at a proclamation on reconciliation
and looking at an investigation into the missing children and the unmarked burials.
All of those were in the latter part of the report,
but the first 25 calls to action were really about addressing immediate needs
like boiled water advisories, housing, health conditions,
the mental health of survivors and their families,
child welfare apprehension rates, incarceration rates.
Because we said until those issues are identified and wrestled to the ground,
it's hard to talk about the bigger question because the bigger questions need to be able to have a clear playing field
in order to really have a good conversation about them.
It's like, you know, when people want to sit and talk to you about your future
and everybody's saying, come on, you've got to fix that broken window,
or you've got to replace the light bulb, or you've got to go to the grocery store and get some food.
So those things distract you from those big conversations and what we said is that
indigenous people need to be put into a place where they can have a a sense of comfort that
they're those things are taken care of and then they'll have a conversation about those bigger
questions but in addition to that you know what we we also pointed out was that there's a lot of healing that's related to that.
You know, mothers spend a lot of time talking at the TRC and subsequently talking to us about losing their children to the child welfare system.
And so we need to understand that those immediate needs need to be addressed.
But far more importantly as well is that they will begin to put Indigenous people into a position where they feel a sense of self-identity, self-respect, before you can get to a position of mutual respect and that's what i've always said is that
it's hard to talk about developing a relationship of mutual respect until you have a situation where
you can respect yourself let's let's assume that that groundwork gets done and that bigger issues are also tackled with tell me in your view i mean you
heard me try this on the minister for his answer but what does reconciliation look like
if we ever reach that day what does it look like well i you know when people ask me that question
i would say well let's let's think of it in the context of something that you're quite familiar with.
And that is, if you had a relationship that you know of, in which there was a history of violence between two people, and then they decided that that was going to be addressed. And so a confrontation occurred with the perpetrator of that violence,
say a man and a wife,
and the perpetrator was,
was caught in that violent situation.
And,
and so what would it take to get to the point where the two would be able to
live in a mutually respectful relationship again?
Well,
first of all,
the perpetrator would have to be accepting of the
fact that he was violent, would have to be aware of the consequences, would have to be prepared to
acknowledge that he was the wrongdoer in all of this. There would have to be an apology, and there
would have to be an acceptance of responsibility to change behavior, but to do it in a meaningful way.
And until those things are in place, moving to a position of reconciliation is going to be very difficult.
Because if the perpetrator merely says, oh, sorry, you caught me.
I apologize, because he knows he has to apologize.
And then he says, okay, so let's, let's get back together again. It doesn't happen that way. And it
doesn't, doesn't happen that way. And it doesn't happen that quickly. And in the same way, the
victim of that history also needs an opportunity to be able to move out of this relationship of victimization this victimology
issues that they've had to live with for so long when they were in effect virtually trained
to blame themselves for the damage that this perpetrator was doing to them
psychologists call that gaslighting in a single couple of relationships where
the perpetrator, while he's beating the victim, will blame her for the fact that he's beating
her. And she'll come to believe that if I just hadn't said that, if I just had cooked
his meal right, if I just had come home and I said I'd be home, if I would be here when
I told him I'd be here, then he wouldn't be doing this to me so
it's my fault so the victims learn to blame themselves as part of this history and they
have to learn to stop blaming themselves and so that sense of um of self blame that sense of lack
of worthiness lack of worth also needs to be addressed as part of the reconciliation process.
So there's work on both sides that needs to be done here.
And so until those things are properly addressed, you will never have that relationship with mutual respect.
You can have it in a dress-up state, so you can have it so that it looks like you're you're getting along
you can have it so that you you look like your relationship is is good but it's not because
underneath it the perpetrator knows that when the opportunity comes you'll be able to poke you in
the shoulder and say get back in line and you will and that happens today
incidentally because i just i remind people to look at the situation in british columbia when
those demonstrators were demonstrating against the construction of the line for a pipeline running
over their territory,
the Prime Minister said,
this is a country in which we follow the rule of law.
But what he doesn't know,
what he didn't acknowledge,
and what he wasn't even aware of,
is that Canada has refused to follow the rule of law,
which is that Indigenous people have rights over their territory, and we can't interfere with those rights until we get their consent
and they've never gotten their consent over those territories.
So there's a lot of work to do.
Yeah.
Can I just back you up a second?
Because I'm just wondering how comfortable you are using that analogy
of the husband beating the wife when we're talking about this issue.
Is that the kind of analogy we should
actually be comparing this to?
Oh yes. It's a typical
victimization relationship that Canada
has maintained for 150 years since Confederation, since Sir John A.
MacDonald first started ignoring the treaties. When you look at the treaties themselves, when
you look at the negotiations behind the treaties, you can see that assurances were given, promises
were made, references were made to the Royal Proclamation of 1763 in which indigenous leaders were promised
that the government would not interfere with their territories would not interfere with their
internal operations and until the indigenous people were prepared to transfer their the title
to their lands to the crown then they would still be able to maintain their rights over those lands.
So when you see that all of that occurred, and then almost immediately, the government started
to pass legislation in which they totally ignored all those obligations. Residential schools,
for example, should never have been put in place because they were a breach of the treaty.
In the treaties, there are promises made by the government
that they would build schools on the reserves to educate the children
so that they would be able to get the same kind of education
that was being provided to the little white children, as the treaty said.
And the government totally ignored that.
They never built a school on a reserve for many, many, many years.
Is the Prime Minister saying the right things in these, and the Minister too,
but in a general way, when the Prime Minister talks about this is Canada's responsibility to bear,
I guess he's talking about all of us, but he's certainly talking about government. When he talks about, you know, telling the truth about these injustices
and forever honoring the memory of those who were in those unmarked graves.
Is he saying the right thing?
Is that what you want to hear the prime minister saying right now?
Or do you want to hear him saying something else?
Well, he's certainly utilizing the right words.
But I don't think he quite understands what it is that he means or should mean by those words.
And that's part of the problem.
Because when he says, for example, that the relationship with Indigenous people is our most important relationship.
He says that, but then the government continues to behave as it always has behaved.
So there's no change in behavior.
And that's the problem, is that the words are not accompanied by the required change in behavior.
And so they're almost empty, those words.
They're almost meaningless because the words are good.
The words sound nice.
The words are the proper words to say.
But the words mean nothing if there is not that change in behavior,
like I talked about with the domestic relationship.
The perpetrator would say, I'm sorry I did that.
I'll not do it again. But if the perpetrator would say, I'm sorry, I did that. I'll not do it again.
But if the perpetrator does not change his behavior, if he continues to poke at his partner,
if he continues to push her when she gets in the way, if he continues to talk about her to others in a demeaning way, without actually saying that to her,
then that behavior is still going to maintain
that perpetrator-victim relationship.
And the government has done nothing to give up its power
and privilege over indigenous people
since the time of the report and by nothing.
I'm even acknowledging the language legislation, the amendment to the Citizenship Oath Act
on the other smaller legislative steps that they've taken,
including the under bill.
Those are important steps, but at the same time,
it has not announced what its plan is to actually move to a position of reconciliation.
What are they going to do to change their behavior?
They have not once established a proper training program
for all senior bureaucrats for example to train them on on how to achieve reconciliation
i've only got a minute left which uh which doesn't seem fair but that's that's what the
clock's telling me um there are canad Canadians who are trying to decide how to celebrate,
if at all, Canada Day this year.
What's your advice to them?
Celebrate it differently.
This is not about celebration.
This is about acknowledgement.
This is about acknowledging Canada as a nation that has done wrong,
among other things.
And so acknowledge that.
I'm not one to suggest that there not be a Canada Day for Canadians to acknowledge the anniversary of the existence of this nation. But I am saying that whatever you call a celebration,
make it for the right reason and acknowledge the full history of what this
country is and has done.
Justice, Senator, Honorable, they all apply.
And it's great.
We've known each other many years and it's always a pleasure to talk to you sir and
also incidentally before we leave yep i want to thank you personally because you were the first
major interview that i did with the trc at our national event in winnipeg back in 2009 or 2010
whatever year that was a long time time ago. I remember that.
I remember that well. And I remember how that journey started with much hope and a degree of promise.
And we're still on the journey.
And as you say, there's a long way to go yet.
But thank you.
Thank you again.
Thank you.
Justice Marie Sinclair, Senator Murray Sinclair.
We'll be back in a moment.
That wraps up our special edition of The Bridge for this day,
and it's special in light of the residential schools question. I hope
you've thought about this issue as a result of these discussions
and planning your own way forward on it. If you have troubles on
this issue and you need some help, guidance, support is
available at 1-866-925-4419.
I'm Peter Mansbridge.
This has been The Bridge.
Thanks for listening.
We'll talk to you again soon.