Montreal pledges to return Indigenous remains to Kahnawake - Action News
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Indigenous

Montreal pledges to return Indigenous remains to Kahnawake

The City of Montreal will surrender thousands-year-old Indigenous human remains in its possession within a year as part of its commitment to reconciliation, mayor Valrie Plante announced Thursday.

Repatriation of remains one of three promises made by mayor Valrie Plante on National Indigenous Peoples Day

Montreal Mayor Valrie Plante made three pledges toward reconciliation on National Indigenous Peoples Day on Thursday. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

The City of Montreal will surrenderIndigenous human remains thousands of years old in its possession as part of its commitment to reconciliation, mayor Valrie Plante announced Thursday.

Remains from six grave sites dating back 2000 to 4000 years will be returned to the Kanien'keh:ka of Kahnawakewithin a year.

"They're doing the right thing here," said Joe Delaronde, press attach for the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake (MCK).

The decision follows requests from the MCK and their heritage portfolio chief Christine Zachary-Deom. Since she was elected to council in 2012, she made the repatriation of prehistoric artifacts and human remains her priority.

"I think there's more and more awareness of this type of occurrence," said Delaronde.

"The people in authority are now trying to do the right thing. And in this case it really, truly is the right thing to do and we applaud the mayor for this this announcement."

Remains found during excavations

One set of remains was unearthed during an archeologicaldig at the intersection of Peel and Sherbrooke streets. Two burials were discovered during excavations in Verdun in 2006and in 2017 as a part of an archeologicalschoolwith McGill University.

In 2007, three burials were foundduring work on Queen Mary Road.

The remains are currently housedat the Universit de Montral's anthropology lab and theMunicipal Archeological Collections Reserve.

A mound exists in an old cemetery across from the Mohawk Council office where historic remains have been buried in the past. It will be the new home for the remainsreturned to the community.

The announcement was one of three promises Plante made to mark National Indigenous Peoples Day, including funding toward a culture and tourism centreand hosting a summit between Quebec mayors and First Nations band council chiefs on Aug. 30.

"It's nice to see that the current mayor is following up on the previous mayor's commitment," said Delaronde.

"It means the City of Montreal is serious in its desire to really look at reconciliation on an ongoing and hopefully long term basis. So, we're pretty pleased about this."

A hub for Indigenous arts and culture

Plante's support for DestiNATIONS: Carrefour International of Indigenous Arts and Cultures comes with a $6.2 million contribution from the city toward the $57 million construction tag. Themultifunctional venue would actas a centrein Montreal for Indigenous art, cultureand tourism.

"Montreal is a beautiful city that has been doing a lot of steps to recognize the Indigenous heritage on this land," said Odile Joannette, ambassador for DestiNATIONS.

The project has been in the works for a decade and emerged as a priority from the Montreal Urban Aboriginal Community Strategy Network. While the desired location is in the Old Port, nospecific spot has been confirmed yet.

"It will be a beautiful space of gathering here on this land," saidJoannette.

"So it is now up to our friends at the Quebec and at the Canadian level to commit to what this will represent for our healing, for our reconciliation, for our co-creation of tomorrow together."

The city's commitment to the project is conditional on the contribution of the governments of Quebec and Canada.

Joannetteand a handful of other DestiNATION supporters woreconstruction hats to a National Indigenous Peoples Day event in the Old Port on Thursday with the hope it would spark a fire under the province and federal government to make a funding announcement.