Mr. Chair, I'm a historian at York University in Toronto, a city you might love to hate. Unfortunately, I'm also a fan of the Toronto Maple Leafs.
I am also an expert witness. I have testified for first nations, the Government of Canada and the attorney general of New Brunswick. I testified in the Marshall case.
It is reasonable to say that non-indigenous fishers may be upset with how the Marshall decision has affected them. They have a large capital investment in the industry. They have worked hard. They want to maintain their communities for their children and grandchildren. Many families date back to the 17th century, such as the D’Entremonts.
It is also reasonable to say that first nations communities have the same purpose: They want to maintain their communities for their children and grandchildren. Their families date from before the 17th century, such as the Battistes.
There are shared as well as different histories here that need to be honoured and remembered so that the past doesn't become a lodestone around our necks but emblematic of our strength as a diverse but unified people.
However, there are elephants in the room.
First, non-indigenous fishers might feel that every time a commercial licence is retired, bought by the federal government and given to a first nation, there will be fewer non-indigenous fishers, and perhaps their scenic coastal towns will become good summer places for rich upper Canadians. Second, first nations might feel that their land was stolen, their resources monopolized, their livelihoods taken away. They might wonder how they are now being accused of not wanting to conserve lobster. They might wonder, as well, why there should be a limit on their livelihood.
Then there are the politicians who grapple with how to represent all their constituents, knowing that indigenous people form a small proportion of their voters. So many people blame the government, and that’s a problem because government is a force of good. There are many intelligent, hard-working people in the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.
How, then, do we reconcile these diverse interests?
It is true that many people living in coastal communities in Atlantic Canada were poor well into the 20th century. It is also true that the Maritimes form the three poorest provinces in Canada. However, it is not true that everyone has been historically marginalized. The most disadvantaged have been the Mi’kmaq, Maliseet, and Passamaquoddy.
Let me give you an example of how that happened. The Mi’kmaq are historically a fishing people. Why, then, is Shubenacadie not on the coast where that community was originally located? It's because coastal areas south of the Shubenacadie River in Nova Scotia were only for white settlers. The Mi’kmaq became refugees in their own land. The Acadia band in southwest Nova was a creation of this diaspora, formed in 1960, but they were placed far away from the sea.
Did the treaties they signed with the British Crown not protect them? The Mi’kmaq and the Maliseet signed six treaties with the British Crown between 1725 and 1779. The treaties were how the British hoped to integrate indigenous people into the common law, making coexistence possible. After 1783, colonial and then federal governments dismissed the treaties as having no legal validity. The Mi’kmaq and the Maliseet, however, remembered the treaties. Why? It was because governments had worked to marginalize them economically, socially and politically. The Mi’kmaq and the Maliseet remembered the treaties because they were a means to maintain a semblance of their own identity. By the early 20th century, they came to identify principally not as Canadian, but through their treaty relationship.
When my family moved to Nova Scotia in 1993, there were already problems in the lobster fishery in Yarmouth. Both the government and the Mi’kmaq believed that the courts were the only way to resolve the issue, and lawyers on both sides wanted the case to be decided by the Supreme Court of Canada.
Both indigenous people and non-indigenous fishers are trying to maintain their historical relationship to their communities, to maintain their families and their culture. On the one hand, we have fishers who have a private right to the fishery through the licensing system. However, the Mi’kmaq don’t have a private right to their licences; the community does. They also fish through the food fishery program.
One question you might ask is what that right to the food fishery program means and why the first nations may want to exercise that right. The other question to ask is why Shubenacadie/Indian Brook is an issue. An examination of the council members today suggests they are mostly young, and perhaps part of a generation who felt the sting of discrimination at their local high school in the 1990s. You need to understand their history and how they think about their history to understand why they do what they do.
Thank you.