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Canada Day protests against systemic racism draw hundreds in Vancouver

Hundreds gathered at the Vancouver Art Gallery to call out what they see as an "ongoing genocide" against Indigenous people in Canada, while others assembled at the Gassy Jack statue in the city's Gastown neighbourhood.

Protesters gather at art gallery, Gassy Jack statue, Trout Lake to highlight discrimination, marginalization

The group Idle No More organized a number of events across the country called #CancelCanadaDay, including one at the Vancouver Art Gallery. (Chris Corday/CBC)

As anti-racism protests shine a spotlight on systemic discrimination across the country, a demonstration in Vancouver tooka more critical look at the nation's legacy of racism this Canada Day.

Following weeks of protest againstpolice brutalityandaccusations of systemic racism in health care, hundreds gathered at the Vancouver Art Gallery to call out what they see as an "ongoing genocide" against Indigenous people in Canada, in an event organized by the Indigenous protest movementIdle No More.

Sierra Tasi Baker, who is Indigenous, said it is importantto learn the history of Canadaand particularly the history of its Indigenous people.

"It is our right as Indigenous people to be on our sovereign territory and exert our sovereignty and our title in our territories," Baker said.

"Moving forward, know whose land you're on."

Sierra Tasi Baker, who is from the Squamish Nation, was one of the attendees at the Vancouver Art Gallery event. (Chris Corday/CBC)

Later Wednesday evening, a group of protesters formed around the Gassy Jackstatue in Vancouver's Gastown neighbourhood.

Activists have been calling attention to the history of Gassy Jack, a.k.a. John Deighton,a bar owner who had operated a saloon in theneighbourhood in the 1860s. Deighton married a 12-year-old Indigenous girl, Quahail-ya, when he was 40 years old, after his first wife's death.

Activists delivered speeches and demanded action, saying the statue represents pedophilia.

The statue was vandalized with red paint last month. More than 17,000people have signed a petition calling for the removal of the statue, which is owned by the City of Vancouver.

In his Canada Day address, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau acknowledged there are real problems the country hasto address like systemic discrimination andthe continued marginalizationof Indigenous peoples.

"That doesn't prevent us of from saying, 'wow, we're a great country,' but it does highlight that we need to be even better. We need to make sure everyone benefits from this country," Trudeau said.

Tinthi Tembo, one of the organizers of the Trout Lake event, said the struggles of Blackand Indigenous people overlap. (Mike Zimmer/CBC)

Another event was held at Vancouver's Trout Lake, where organizers wanted to celebrate Black and Indigenous artists often ignored by the arts industry.

Tinthi Tembo, one of the organizers of the event, said the struggles of Blackand Indigenous people overlap.

"We just couldn't stand anymore to commemorate a day that sensationalizes and glorifies colonialism and genocide, and especially being on this particular land here in B.C., being on stolen land, it's a force to be reckoned with," Tembo said.

Organizer Kimani Geoffrey addedit's important for people to consider theirown role in oppression.

"Everybody in this country is going to have to ask [themselves] what have I done what have Idone to count?" he said."Am I going to be counted in this moment in history as somebody who did something?"

With files from Eva Uguen-Csenge