Canada column for
Sunday, June 21/20
THE CANADIAN REPORT
(c) By Jim Fox
Canadian protest
groups have been defacing and removing statues and monuments of historical
figures.
The incidents are
mounting across Canada against anti-black and anti-Indigenous racism.
The latest victims
are statues of Canada’s first Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald in Prince
Edward Island and the late Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau who was black
faced in a park in Vaughan, near Toronto.
Charlottetown Mayor
Philip Brown denounced the vandalism when Macdonald was doused in red paint but
said consideration is being given to removing the statue.
At issue was
Macdonald’s role in the creation of
residential schools where Indigenous children were taken from their homes and
parents.
Two years ago, Victoria
city council removed a statue of Macdonald that stood outside city hall and now
remains in storage.
Vaughan Mayor
Maurizio Bevilacqua said he is “deeply disappointed” at the vandalism.
Pierre Trudeau was
committed to fostering a fair and just society and the creation of the Charter
of Rights and Freedoms, he said.
Trudeau’s son
Justin, the current prime minister, said mistakes have been made with “entrenched
racism in policing agencies and public institutions.”