City to consider renaming Langevin Avenue after late Algonquin leader - Action News
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Ottawa

City to consider renaming Langevin Avenue after late Algonquin leader

A residential street east of downtown Ottawa may soon be renamed after respected Indigenous elderWilliam Commanda, becauseof the connection ofits eponymous historical figure toCanada's residential school system.

Residential street currently honours architect of Canada's residential school system

Governor General Michaelle Jean invests Elder William Commanda as an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2009. On Wednesday, Ottawa city council will consider a motion proposing to rename a street after him. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

City council will decide Wednesday whether to rename a residential street in Ottawa'sBeechwood neighbourhoodafter a respected Indigenous leader and thereby drop itsconnection to a historical figurewith ties to one of Canada's darkest chapters.

Rideau-Rockcliffe Coun. Rawlson King will bring forward a motion calling for Langevin Avenue in his ward to be renamed Commanda Way, in honour of the late Algonquin political and spiritual leaderWilliam Commanda.

Commanda, who died in 2011 at the age of 97, served as chief ofKitigan Zibi Anishinabeg First Nation, near Maniwaki, Que.,for almost two decades.

He spent years advocating for the rights of Indigenous people in Canada and for reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.

The streetis currently named after Hector-Louis Langevin, a father of Confederation widely considered one of thearchitects of the residential school system,in which thousands of Indigenous children suffered physical, mental and sexual abuse.

"It's important to recognize Indigenous culture and a person who hasdriven, basically, the protection of culture," said King, who is also the city's liaison for anti-racism and ethnocultural relations.

"We can easily say that William Commanda ...spent his entire life working towards reconciliation and ensuring the continuity of Indigenous culture."

Claudette Commanda, granddaughter of the renowned late Algonquin leader, says her grandfather was a fierce advocate for the rights of Indigenous people. (Joe Lofaro/CBC)

'Fierce advocate'

Commanda was a proponent of social justice and equality who fought passionately against the abusive school system Langevin helped create, said his granddaughter, Claudette Commanda, executive director of the First Nations Confederacy of Cultural Education Centres.

"He was a fierce, fierce, fierce advocate for justice. He was a fierce protector of our rights," she said.

She said her grandfather alsoencouraged good relations betweenFirst Nations people and non-Indigenous Canadians,years before that became a national project in the wake of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

"It was about reconciliation, building the right relationship between our peoples to ensure that ... First Nations people and settlers that we would live in peaceful harmony and mutual understanding and respect," she said.

Renaming the street, she said,would represent a reclamation of the history of the landand provide an opportunity for people in Ottawa to learn more about the city's history as Algonquin territory.

Process began in 2018

The renaming process began in 2018under King's predecessor,Tobi Nussbaum, who'd beencontacted by aLangevinAvenue resident who wanted tochange the name.

King continued that process after he was elected inApril 2019.

Hector-Louis Langevin, a father of Confederation and a prominent member of Sir John A. Macdonald's cabinet, proposed residential schools as the most expeditious way to assimilate First Nations children into Euro-Canadian society. (Library and Archives Canada)

He said theproposed name,Commanda Way, came from a list of names generated by his office following consultations with the street's residents and Ottawa's Indigenous community.

If the motion passes, it wouldn't be the first time a space named after Langevin has been renamed: in 2017, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau dropped the name Langevin Block for the building across from Parliament Hill that houses the Prime Minister's Office.

It is now officially called the Office of the Prime Minister and Privy Council.

Similarly, abridge in Calgary that used to bear Langevin's name was renamed Reconciliation Bridge after a vote from the local council.

King's motion says his office would coverall costs related to the renaming, including any costs for new street signs.

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