70,000 people take
part in Walk for Reconciliation in Vancouver
Organizers
amazed at turnout as tens of thousands braved the rain to
participate
Sarah Taguiam
A sea of people that organizers estimated at 70,000
braved pouring rain and chanted their way through downtown Vancouver on Sunday
for Canada’s first reconciliation walk.
“It’s amazing … that so many people came out in spite of
the rain to show their commitment to reconciliation and creating a new society
that embraces all of us,” said Reconciliation Canada executive director Karen
Joseph. The four-kilometre walk from Queen Elizabeth Theatre to
Coast Salish lands near Science World was the finalé of a weeklong Truth and
Reconciliation event where First Nations people strove to move past the horrors
they suffered in Canada’s residential schools. But survivors weren’t the only ones present during the
walk. Bernice King, daughter of
American civil rights hero Martin Luther King Jr., delivered an impassioned
speech in which she called the past treatment of First Nations people
appalling.
“Struggle is a never-ending process and freedom is never
really won, you earn it and you win it in every generation,” King said in front
of a cheering crowd. “But non-violence is the only way. It allows you to aim
against oppression but not against the oppressor because … hate will destroy the
hater more than the hated.” Members of different cultural communities from
around B.C. attended the event to show their support. “Thousands of people from all walks of life, from every
colour and every culture, are all here as Canadians to share the First Nation
people’s pain and healing,” said Navnit Singh, a survivor of the 1984 Sikh
massacre in New Delhi. Residential
schools ran for more than a century in Canada under the belief that Aboriginal
children should learn Canadian customs to assimilate into mainstream
society. The federal government and churches have apologized for the abuse
and the depressing conditions students suffered in residential
schools. About 75,000 past
residential school students have also received financial compensation as a part
of Canada’s attempt to address its past policies. King said that steps like these are important in
empowering people, but First Nations members must stay strong in their struggle
to create a better future. “Walk together, children, don’t you get weary,”
King said, quoting the lyrics of a traditional spiritual. “Struggle together, hold on together, don’t you get
weary. “And one day, you’ll be
able to join hands and say … free at last, free at last.” — with files from The Canadian
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