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Despite the
considerable support I have received whenever I have jumped into the native
fray, the vitriol from the stakeholders has been vicious, almost too vicious to
withstand. Ordinary Canadians, on the other hand, have been fair-minded to a
fault on aboriginal affairs. What they told me, in a nutshell, was this: they
respect diversity, but they want to interact with other Canadians, natives
included, as equals before the law of the land. Canadians also question the
native industry's version of justice in which they must now acquiesce.
There are certain
narratives that come to dominate the market place of ideas to the exclusion of
competing perspectives. The narrative of justice in society is one example. Like
any successful monopoly, the monopoly over cultural discourse is won through
government privilege. In partnership with government, native leadership, the
lawyers, consultants and academics get to decide who is on the side of the
angels and who must burn in purgatory. With hefty incentives at stake, these
special interests work particularly hard to relieve Canadians of their
decision-making rights, while continuing at the same time to indenture them in
the funding of their agenda.
Before they were
effectively silenced, Canadians spoke loud and clear on aboriginal privilege.
They delivered a resounding referendum-No to the 1992 Charlottetown Accord,
which proposed to entrench special rights for Indians. Believe it or not, but
the battered—and might I add, Western—principle of equality before the law
still had its adherents. Alas, government found other legislative tricks with
which to undermine the Charlottetown Accord, forging ahead with its agenda and
overriding the will of the people. The cultural script concerning all things
native became indisputable.
For example, buoyed
by the perverse principle of collective guilt for posterity, native readers
informed me that my ancestors were land thieves, as was I. Who cares that my
people have an alibi? At the time of the crimes against natives they were being
persecuted in Europe for being Jews. No matter: according to orthodoxy, all
Eurocentric folk stand in the dock accused (falsely) of stealing the land from
natives, who, of course, had only ever lived in harmony with it.
Natives are nature's
custodians; there's another fallacy popularized by Jean-Jacques Rousseau's
panegyric on the Noble Savage. Voltaire was in the know when he said that
Rousseau is to philosophers as the ape is to man. Rousseau certainly was
uninformed by facts when he described natives as living in unity with nature.
Less forgivable are the many present-day authors and researchers who, despite
the corpus of research attesting to the lack of conservation among natives,
persist in describing pre-Columbian America as "a pristine natural
kingdom".
Before the decimation
of the native population, largely via the white man's diseases, the Americas had
a sizable population of natives that exerted a considerable ecological
footprint. For one, native tribes engaged in bi-annual forest burning. According
to an article in "Environment" by B.L. Turner and Karl Butzer
"the forests of the Americas, from Canada to Argentina were so highly
disturbed or modified by Amerindian use by 1492 that it is surprising that even
the popular literature missed this point." "The species which the
Indians most wanted to hunt…were found most easily in areas of recently burnt
forest, which is why they burnt the forest over and over again."
Then there was the
stampeding during a hunt of herds of animals over a cliff. Used repeatedly, some
buffalo jumps hold the remains of hundreds of thousands of animals, with
patterns of local extinction being documented. Where agriculture was practiced
in the central and southern parts of America, evidence from sediment points to
severe soil erosion, which was already widespread before the arrival of the
white man.
And who penned the
famous words "the flowers are our sisters…the eagle our brother…Whatever
we do to the earth, we do to ourselves…"? Chief Seattle's famous 1854 New
Age speech, deployed by environmentalists to buttress native conservationism,
was written in 1972 by a Hollywood scriptwriter by the name of Ted Perry.
In light of
archeological findings, the myth of the purity of primitive life juxtaposed to
the savagery of Western Culture is even less justified. The Americas are
scattered with archeological evidence of routine massacres, cannibalism,
dismemberment, slavery, abuse of women and human sacrifice among native tribes.
Why, the Northwest Territories Yellowknife tribe eventually disappeared as a
direct result of a massacre carried out as late as 1823. By the same shift of
logic, should remaining native "nations" perhaps not be made to pay
reparations among themselves?
In no way do these
facts mitigate or excuse the cruel treatment natives have endured. All they do
is cut through the "rhetoric of moral superiority" and challenge the
cultural script.
©2000 Ilana Mercer
The
Calgary Herald
September
14
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