Canada remembers Murray Sinclair, trailblazing Indigenous judge and senator | Indigenous Rights News
Canada remembers Murray Sinclair, trailblazing Indigenous judge and senator | Indigenous Rights News
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Bu içerik, Kanada’nın önde gelen Kızılderili yargıcı ve senatörü Murray Sinclair’in ölümü üzerine düzenlenen ulusal anma törenini ve onun mirasını ele almaktadır. Sinclair, Kanada’daki Kızılderili çocuklara karşı işlenen kötü muamelelerle ilgili Gerçekler ve Uzlaşma Komisyonu’nu yöneten bir öncü olarak tanınmaktadır. Anma töreninde, Sinclair’in ailesi, arkadaşları ve liderleri onun mirasının asla unutulmayacağını belirtmişlerdir. Sinclair, Kızılderili bir avukat ve senatör olarak Kanada’nın Manitoba eyaletinde ilk Kızılderili yargıcı olmuş ve ülke genelinde gerçekleştirilen yüzlerce dinleme oturumuna liderlik etmiştir. Bu dinleme oturumlarında, Kanada’nın Kızılderili çocukları ailelerinden zorla alıp devlet okullarına götürmesi ve bu çocukların maruz kaldığı kötü muameleler ele alınmıştır. Sinclair, Kanada hükümetinin kültürel soykırım politikasının bir parçası olarak kurulan devlet okulu sisteminin en karanlık ve rahatsız edici bölümlerinden biri olarak nitelendirmiştir. Sinclair’in ölümünden sonra, Kanada’nın çeşitli yerlerindeki Kızılderili topluluk liderleri ve savunucuları, Sinclair’in Kızılderili halkının karşılaştığı sistemik ırkçılıkla kararlı bir şekilde mücadele etme taahhüdünü hatırlamışlardır. Mary Simon, Kanada’nın ilk Kızılderili genel valisi, Sinclair’i “gerçeğin, adaletin ve iyileşmenin sesi” olarak tanımlamıştır. Sinclair’in mirası, onun eğitim çalışmaları ve iz bırakıcı etkisiyle uzun yıllar devam edecektir.
The public event on Sunday afternoon in Winnipeg, in central Canada, comes days after Sinclair passed away on November 4 at age 73.
“Few people have shaped this country in the way that my father has, and few people can say they changed the course of this country the way that my father had – to put us on a better path,” his son Niigaan Sinclair said at the start of the memorial.
“All of us: Indigenous, Canadians, newcomers, every person whether you are new to this place or whether you have been here since time immemorial, from the beginning, all of us have been touched by him in some way.”
Sinclair, an Anishinaabe lawyer and senator and a member of the Peguis First Nation, was the first Indigenous judge in Manitoba and the second-ever in Canada.
As chief commissioner of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), Sinclair organised hundreds of hearings across Canada to hear directly from survivors of the country’s residential school system.
— First Nations Child & Family Caring Society (@CaringSociety) November 4, 2024
From the late 1800s until 1996, Canada forcibly removed an estimated 150,000 Indigenous children from their families and forced them to attend the institutions. They were made to cut their hair, forbidden from speaking their native language, and many were physically and sexually abused.
“The residential school system established for Canada’s Indigenous population in the nineteenth century is one of the darkest, most troubling chapters in our nation’s history,” Sinclair wrote in the TRC’s final report.
“It is clear that residential schools were a key component of a Canadian government policy of cultural genocide.”
Mary Simon, Canada’s first Indigenous governor general, described Sinclair during Sunday’s memorial as “the voice of truth, justice and healing”.
She said he had “a heart brave enough to expose injustices, yet generous enough to make everyone around him feel welcome and important”.
Other Indigenous community leaders and advocates across Canada also have spent the past week remembering Sinclair for his unwavering commitment to confronting the systemic racism faced by Indigenous people.
“One of the greatest insights he shared is that reconciliation is not a task to be done by Survivors. True reconciliation, he said, must include institutional change,” Alvin Fiddler, grand chief of Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) in northern Ontario, said in a statement after Sinclair’s death.
“Reconciliation, he taught us, is ours to achieve,” Fiddler said.
“The work ahead of us is difficult, but we share his belief that we owe it to each other to build a country based on a shared future of healing and trust. Murray encouraged us to walk the path towards reconciliation. Accepting this responsibility is a fitting way to honour his legacy.”
Pam Palmater, chair of Indigenous governance at Toronto Metropolitan University, said Sinclair was someone who “never stopped educating Canadians … and making sure we never forget”.
In an interview with CBC News on Sunday, Palmater noted that Sinclair “didn’t just conduct the TRC”; he was involved in many other initiatives, including an inquiry into child deaths in Manitoba and an investigation into the police department in Thunder Bay, Ontario.
“He’s never going to be forgotten. He’s one of those people where his legacy lives on,” Palmater said. “His impact is going to be felt for many decades to come.”
Canada remembers Murray Sinclair, trailblazing Indigenous judge and senator | Indigenous Rights News
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