I think it would be very much that we're still here, we're part of Confederation, and we're moving forward together.
I'm not that old, and when I was in grade eight studying history, I learned that the Indians died with the buffalo. I saw the big picture at the end of a railway track with all these big buffalo bones all piled up and some buffalo soldier with his gun, on the mound, looking quite vindicated. Then we moved on to the rest of Canadian history.
I think there is a much greater story to tell, and it is coming out. The apology process is important, but you see polls and you read the comments on websites, like those under the story on Attawapiskat last night, and you understand that there is such a lack of understanding of the history, the current conditions, and the current relationship. That's the kind of thing we need to bust through together.
So I think the primary message is that we're here, we have a historical relationship, and we're going to continue and grow that relationship moving forward.