Oka Crisis 25th anniversary marked in Kanesatake's Pines - Action News
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Oka Crisis 25th anniversary marked in Kanesatake's Pines

Twenty-five years after the Oka Crisis, the relationship between the Kanesatake Mohawks and the municipality of Oka remains fractured, like a wound that never quite heals.

On July 11, 1990, a dispute over land in Oka exploded in violence

Mohawk John Cree, a Longhouse spiritual leader, leads a procession through the Pines in Kanesatake to mark the 25th anniversary of the Oka Crisis. (CBC)

Twenty-fiveyears after the Oka Crisis, the relationship between the KanesatakeMohawks and the municipality of Oka remains fractured, like a wound that never quite heals.

Mohawks and their supporters marched through the land at the centre of the 1990 disputeknown by the aboriginal community as thePineson Saturday, the anniversary of the crisis.

In a speech before the march, a member of the Mohawk communityreiterated that Mohawksbelieve the land is rightfully theirs and should be given to them by the federal government.

It's one of severalevents taking placeon Saturdayto commemorate the 78-day standoff ofthe summerof 1990, which was triggered by the shooting death ofSQ Cpl.Marcel Lemay in a botched police raid on a protest camp in the Pines.

KanesatakeGrand Chief Serge Simon cautions against celebrating the event, saying it is a solemn anniversary.

The Oka Crisis grew out of an argument between the Mohawks of Kanesatake and the townof Oka over the municipality's plans to expand a golf course from nine to 18 holes, on land encroaching on a Mohawk cemetery which the aboriginal community have always maintained is theirs.