Justin Trudeau visits 'reoccupation' teepee on Parliament Hill - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 08:50 AM | Calgary | -0.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Justin Trudeau visits 'reoccupation' teepee on Parliament Hill

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited a teepee on Parliament Hill that was erected as a symbol of the unresolved grievances many Indigenous people have as the country is set to celebrate its 150th anniversary.

Prime minister said he delivered 'a message of respect and reconciliation'

Justin Trudeau visits 'reoccupation' teepee on Parliament Hill

7 years ago
Duration 0:38
Trudeau visited a teepee set up on Parliament Hill, a structure erected as a symbol of the unresolved grievances many Indigenous peoples have as the country is set to celebrate its 150th anniversary.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visited a teepee on Parliament Hill that was erected as a symbol of the unresolved grievances many Indigenous people have as the country is set to celebrate its 150th anniversary.

The teepee was moved Thursday night, with the help of the RCMP, from a spot on the edge of the parliamentary lawn to a more prominent location next to the main stage in front of Centre Block.

Mid-afternoon, other activists tried to build a second structure next to the teepee but were stopped by police, who confiscated their tent polesand stopped them from lighting a sacred fire on the grounds.

"Why won't they let us put up our community structure on Parliament? Anxiety? That's what it is: settler anxiety; because settlers know this is Indigenous land,"FreddyStoneypoint,one of theorganizers, said after police stepped in.

"Indigenous nationhood was here before, and it's here right now."

Members of theBawaatingWater Protectors,who came to the capital from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.to build the teepee, have said they are not engaging in protest, but rather a "reoccupation" of Parliament Hill, which is situated on the traditional territory of the Algonquin people.

Theseactivists, like many other Indigenous people, say they have little reason to celebrate the country's history of colonialization, marked by land dispossession, Indian residential schools and forced assimilation.

Earlier Friday,Trudeauwas seen wearing a jean jacket with the words "150 years young" emblazoned on the back as he entered the teepee. He was accompanied by his wife, Sophie GrgoireTrudeau.

The prime minister spent some 40 minutes with a handful of activists and left without speaking to media, saying only that his visit was"a message of respect and reconciliation."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau leaves the teepee. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

"I'm overwhelmed right now," CandaceDayNeveau, a spokeswoman for the water protectors, said after the meeting. "We let Justin know that we want to hold him accountable [on his promises]. We'll be coming back if we don't feel like we're being honoured, and we'll be exerting our inherent right to be here as Indigenous people."

Water protectors figure prominently in First Nations culture, and have been at the forefront of protests against natural resources development in this country.

Video from inside the teepee

Neveaulater posted a nine-minute video of the conversation with the prime minister on her Facebook page.

She made it clear to Trudeauthat their principal concerns arethe continued imposition of the Indian Act on First Nations peoples and mismanagement at the department of Indigenous Affairs.

For decades, this document has dictated relations between the federal government and Indigenous peoples, while also setting parameters onwho canregister as a status Indian.

Trudeau told the activists that he is prepared to move Canada beyond "colonial structures."

Video from Trudeau inside 'reoccupation' teepee

7 years ago
Duration 2:32
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the activists that he is prepared to move Canada beyond "colonial structures" like the Indian Act.

"I've said we have to go beyond the Indian Act, we have to end the Indian Act, but we can't do it with a stroke of the pen from Ottawa. We have to do it with your partnership, with your leadership," he said in the video captured on an iPhone. "We need to respect your paceand accompany you on that [path] as best we can."

'We are glad that hedid come'

Trudeau also thanked the activists for "being these strong voices, for being courageous," while reiterating he was pleased that they could find a way to keep the teepee in place.

"We need to have a space for you," he said. "This is very visible, very present, and a counter balance to the narrative [of the 150 celebrations]."

"There was not a lot that he could promise outright," Ashley Courchene, a member ofSagkeeng First Nation, said of the talks.

"[But]I think that we are glad that he did come and say that what we did [building the teepee] is very, very important. He did bring up a good point that, at notime in the pasthave prime ministers met with somebody who is doing this. I commend the prime minister for coming and doing that."

On Thursday, when asked about the "reoccupiers,"Trudeausaid it was understandable that not all are celebrating equally.

"We recognize that over the past decades, generations, indeed centuries,Canada has failed Indigenous peoples," Trudeau said.

Water protector Candace Day Neveau says she was 'overwhelmed' after meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, but will return to Parliament Hill if he doesn't keep his promises to Indigenous peoples. (CBC News)

The group intends to perform Indigenous ceremonies all weekend, and will be at the centre of celebrations that are expected to draw some 500,000 people to Ottawa's downtown core.

RCMPofficers searched the teepee before the prime minister entered.

"They searched everything [and] that's totally fine. We're not hiding anything. We're here to show you everything. We're open. We're here to show a peaceful ceremony on traditional lands," Johnathan Wabigwan, one of the activists, said of the police presence.

Inside the tent, Trudeau thankedactivists for understanding the role security forces have to play in protecting the Canada Day festivities.

'We want to hold him accountable,' Indigenous activists say after meeting PM

7 years ago
Duration 0:29
Water protectors who built teepee on Parliament Hill react to their 40-minute meeting with the prime minister.