Jay Watts
In 1995, a report issued as part of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples called suicide “one of the most urgent problems facing aboriginal communities." 22 years later, Canada’s ongoing colonial project is still taking a staggering and gruesome toll on the health and lives of First Nations. In Attawapiskat, a community of close to 2,000, there were 11 suicide attempts last Saturday, on top of 100 suicide attempts since last September.
In 1995, a report issued as part of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples called suicide “one of the most urgent problems facing aboriginal communities." 22 years later, Canada’s ongoing colonial project is still taking a staggering and gruesome toll on the health and lives of First Nations. In Attawapiskat, a community of close to 2,000, there were 11 suicide attempts last Saturday, on top of 100 suicide attempts since last September.
In response to such
events there has been mobilization. In Toronto, Idle No More and Black Lives
Matter have responded with an occupation of an Indigenous and Northern Affairs
Canada office; in Ottawa people are marching from Parliament Hill to
INAC in Gatineau; while other INAC offices are being occupied in Winnipeg,
Regina and James Bay.
But recent events in Attawapiskat are not simply a generalized response to decades and decades of Canadian colonialism - the specifics of Canadian colonialism in Attawapiskat are damning, too… Attawapiskat is 90km from the open-pit Victor Diamond Mine, where multinational diamond company De Beers, founded by the British imperialist and white supremacist Cecil Rhodes, has managed to work out an astonishingly preferential agreement to plunder the resource wealth of the Attawapiskat First Nation with the complicity of the Ontario and Canadian governments. The mine itself is on lands taken from Attawapiskat First Nation through an extension of Treaty 9 in 1930.
DeBeers' new luxury retail location in Vancover |
Housing in Attawapiskat |
Worse than criminal. Why isn't this front page news going along-side the stories of the suicide epidemic? Where is our moral conscience as a nation?
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