[Witness spoke in Anishinaabemowin and provided the following text:]
Ziigwaanikwe nindizhinikaaz. Mooz dodem. Animakee Wa Zhing doonji.
[Witness provided the following translation:]
My name is Ziigwaanikwe. My clan is Moose. I am from Animakee Wa Zhing.
[English]
Good afternoon members of the Standing Committee on Indigenous and Northern Affairs.
I'm honoured to be here on the unceded territory of the Algonquin nation to speak of matters that strike at the heart of Canada's relationship with Treaty No. 3 and all treaty territories in Ontario.
My name is Linda McVicar. I'm the elected chief of Animakee Wa Zhing First Nation, part of the Anishinabe nation in Treaty No. 3.
Do you know what a cuckoo's nest is?
A cuckoo doesn't build its own nest. It instead lays its eggs in other birds' nests. That is what's going on here. Métis have used our Anishinabe kin with mixed European ancestry to insert themselves in our treaty, misrepresenting themselves in an 1875 half-breed adhesion. Ask anyone with mixed heritage today if that makes them less Anishinabe. I say unequivocally that this has nothing to do with the separate Métis people in Treaty No. 3. It has everything to do with Anishinabe self-determination of their citizenship in 1873, which resulted in the 1875 adhesion in Treaty No. 3.
I am here to ask that this bill not pass. This bill is contrary to your own constitutional law and to your treaty relationship with us. Allowing this bill to become law would be wholly inconsistent with the honour of the Crown. It would make a mockery of my community and nations' aboriginal and treaty rights recognized under your constitution.
This bill is contrary to your constitutional law because it creates a doorway to the right to self-government for groups who don't have the history that your Supreme Court has made clear must necessarily be the foundation for this inherent or Creator-given right. Parliament does not have constitutional authority to create constitutional rights where none exist, yet this is exactly what this bill tries to do.
To be clear, UNDRIP does not create rights. It is a recognition of the inherent jurisdiction of pre-existing nations and treaties that exist between indigenous people and the Crown.
Clause 8 of the bill says that Canada recognizes Métis governments “set out in column 1 of the schedule” as being “authorized to act on behalf of the Métis collectivity set out in column 2”, and that this column 2 collectivity “holds the right to self-determination, including the inherent right of self-government recognized and affirmed by section 35 of the Constitution”.
Who are these column 2 collectivities in Ontario? They are collectives of non-status Indians from our first nations, who have been allowed to belong to the Métis corporation in Ontario. This includes the so-called northwestern Ontario Métis community, which claims rights through our treaty. There was no distinct Métis community and no Métis nation living or governing within Manito Aki when we entered into Treaty No. 3 with the Crown. There were the half-breeds living amongst us who were part of our Anishinabe nation.
In its Powley decision in 2003, your own Supreme Court established criteria for identifying Métis communities that could have section 35 rights in your Constitution. There must be a group “with a distinctive collective identity, living together in the same geographical area and sharing a common way of life” with “some degree of continuity and stability”. This distinctive collective identity in a specific geographical area must have been well established before effective Crown control in that area.
The northwestern Ontario Métis community does not meet these criteria, yet this bill would recognize them as having section 35 rights. Section 35 is not a melting pot. We don't all wait to see what each other proves as rights and say, “Yes, me too.” Self-government is an inherent right. It must come from being a nation and having your own laws in Ontario, which did not happen for any Métis community. In Manito Aki, it could not happen without our consent.
Canada will break its commitment to Treaty No. 3, irreparably harming our relationship, if there is a section 35 treaty made in Manito Aki with the Métis. The bill requires no due diligence and no consultation to Treaty No. 3 before a treaty is entered into and comes into effect. It does not even permit parliamentary oversight.
The minister's job is not done here. He should be questioned about allowing this cuckoo's nest. Our kin with mixed ancestry is a fact of first nation history and cannot be the basis of an inherent right to self-government.
This bill is problematic and must not go forward. The honour of the Crown demands this. Truth must come before reconciliation.
Meegwetch.