Wednesday, August 15, 2018

John A. Macdonald creating quite a stir

"Victoria city council voted to remove the statue as a gesture of reconciliation last week. It noted Macdonald's role in establishing the residential school system, which tore some 150,000 First Nation, Inuit and Métis children away from their communities and families. "



Perhaps the best thing about this controversy is the interest it has created on a topic that needs to be talked about. Loads of people have weighed in for and against but I think Kate Sole's letter says it the best...and not just because I know her. Thanks, Fern, for sending me this letter to the editor in the Times Colonist.

"By love, you conquer the world"

Reading Friday's front page, I was struck dumb by Mayor Lisa Helps' justification for removing the statue of Sir John A. Macdonald  from city hall: "It is about rewriting history, but it is not about erasing history."
   First, these two actions are not mutually exclusive. In order to rewrite history, one would first have to erase the current version.
   Second, Helps demonstrates naivety in even suggesting such a notion. No one has the power to rewrite history. No authoritative political speech, no heartfelt apology, no generous monetary compensation and certainly no relocation of any statue, can undo atrocities committed against the Songhees and Esquimalt Nations.
   So instead of futilely attempting to compensate for the past, let us look to the future with Holocaust survivor Philip Riteman (whose obituary also appeared in Friday's paper) as an inspiration. Let the leaders of every culture embrace and become involved in public education, as Riteman did, so that no community will ever again have to suffer because of its beliefs.
   Let our law enforcers effectively combat discrimination. And let us all spread Riteman's message that: "By love, you conquer the world. By hate, you'll only destroy the world and you destroy yourself."

Kate Soles
Victoria

Well said, Kate!