Column: At Indian Day School, 'God Save the Queen' rang hollow

Canada News News

Column: At Indian Day School, 'God Save the Queen' rang hollow
Canada Latest News,Canada Headlines
  • 📰 sudburydotcom
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 54 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 25%
  • Publisher: 89%

'The Queen never heard my voice when I sang to her as a child. She never heard my voice as an adult when I was a Chief,' laments local elder

I have this childhood memory of standing before class started and having to sing God Save the Queen at Indian Day School while looking out the window at our impoverished First Nation community. I must have been in Grade 3 because we were in a small one-room school building which was known as the Little School.

I was old enough to recognize that the gulf of economic disparity between her world and ours was wider than the ocean that separated us. The BNA received Royal Assent in March of that year. Nine years later, in 1876, the Indian Act received Royal Assent and was enacted as the law of the land in the new world, which was the world of the Indigenous Nations. The ancient world, to us.

This is the new world that the Queen inherited. This is the world that I was born into. This was why I was to stand and sing to her each morning. Without the Indian Act, Indigenous Nations enjoyed clean drinking water, a home for every family, a good life on the land where we were able to sustain ourselves. We enjoyed trade with other nations. During the fur trade we were a part of the world economy as we traded with the early European explorers.

But the treaties are something we were involved in creating. The treaties contain our rights as a people. Through the Indian Act, assimilation, and residential schools, the Crown hoped that the treaties would be forgotten.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

sudburydotcom /  🏆 6. in CA

Canada Latest News, Canada Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Woman recalls meeting future queen as eight-year-old in small-town OntarioWoman recalls meeting future queen as eight-year-old in small-town OntarioEliette Levesque was just eight-years-old when she had her first brush with royalty, never realizing she had just met a future queen.
Read more »

Queen Elizabeth II's coffin takes long road through ScotlandQueen Elizabeth II's coffin takes long road through ScotlandIn a slow, somber and regal procession, Queen Elizabeth II’s flag-draped coffin was driven through the Scottish countryside Sunday.
Read more »

A queen and her corgis: Elizabeth loved breed from childhoodA queen and her corgis: Elizabeth loved breed from childhoodFor many people around the world, the word corgi is forever linked to Queen Elizabeth II.
Read more »

Queen Elizabeth II's coffin makes journey through ScotlandQueen Elizabeth II's coffin makes journey through ScotlandQueen Elizabeth II\u0027s flag\u002Ddraped coffin is passing through the rugged Scottish countryside Sunday on a final journey from her summer estate.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-02-22 10:56:11