Thank you.
My name is Walter Wastesicoot. I am the Grand Chief of the Keewatin Tribal Council. Here is my prepared statement.
In Canada's democracy, there is no freedom as my ancestors lived it. The shackles of Canada's democracy are visible in the scars of oppression that run throughout my body. My living memory does not include the freedom experienced by my ancestors.
Canada's democracy is a fallacy of attractive catchphrases that detract from Canada's racist roots. There is no room for the freedom experienced by my ancestors, as that freedom would mean returning the land and its resources to the first peoples. Canada will remain an immature creature of the English Crown that tolerates the thorns of self-righteous France for as long as it buries the theft of the lands and resources within the doctrine of discovery and prioritizes its lust for God, gold and glory over integrity and fairness.
Freedom is with the animals that are not restrained by legislation, regulation and policies. Freedom is with the vegetation that naturally grows in the spring and rests in the fall. Freedom is with the water that runs as it was meant to from time immemorial. Freedom is not within the democracy of Canada.
I wrote the above statement on November 15, 2022. I shared it with my wife, Dr. Jennie Wastesicoot, who advised me to be careful whom I share it with.
Our experience with Canada's democracy has not been in our best interests. On the contrary, our experience has been as the recipients of Canada's colonial policies of forced relocation from ancestral lands and forced attendance at residential schools, day schools and boarding homes. In short, it's trauma.
I later shared the above piece with a lawyer, who is a partner at his firm, and two parliamentarians, one of whom leads his party while the other has ministerial responsibilities. I told the lawyer about my wife's warning, to which he replied, “What? Why? That should be shared anywhere with whomever because it's the truth.” The parliamentarians used words such as “powerful” and “it is the truth”.
In 1670, 354 years ago, Britain established the Hudson’s Bay Company, which started commercial activity on the ancestral lands of the Ininew of the Hudson Bay region. The land occupied by the Hudson’s Bay Company became known as Rupert’s Land, which was then sold to Canada in 1869 for $1.5 million. Three hundred and eight years ago, the Dene and Ininew of the region made a peace treaty that continues to be recognized to this day.
The early explorers, traders and settlers who followed brought their values, beliefs and institutions with them and collectively drew on the doctrine of discovery to colonize what is now Canada. They brought no land with them. Canada has an assumed jurisdiction on lands that are not from England or France.
What I share with you today is my truth. How are you going to protect my truth and my freedom of expression? I suggest that your educational curricula in this country can be one means. The education or training that immigrants receive with acknowledgement of this truth in their oath of citizenship can be another.
How will you protect my freedom of expression when you have a vested interest in upholding the fallacy of Canada's democracy?
In March 2023, the 11 nations affiliated with the Keewatin Tribal Council declared a regional state of emergency due to a system-wide failure in public safety, health and infrastructure. Of those 11 first nations, nine are remote and isolated. The northern Manitoba first nations are characterized by increasing gang violence, preventable deaths due to lack of access to needed services, misdiagnosis, drug overdose and suicide, a lack of infrastructure for clean drinking water, inadequate housing and no all-season road to the Manitoba network.
The Shamattawa First Nation and the Tataskweyak Cree Nation have had to go to court for clean drinking water. The Northlands First Nation has joined a class action on housing.
Canada's democracy is killing our people. The criminalization of those who walk in their truth to defend their lands and resources must stop. The marginalization of the first peoples must stop. The practice of denialism must stop.
Land acknowledgements are patronizing and meaningless without the action of giving title to the land. When Canada arrives at a point in its growth where title to these lands remains with the original peoples under—