Monday, 4 October 2021

Truth, Reconciliation and Decolonization in Canada

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You’re listening to Back in the USSR on 93.3 FM CFRU.  I am Siegfried, and I want to issue my first ever content warning, comrades and friends.  This is something that I should have done last week.  It’s something I should have done on numerous occasions before, because many of the things that get mentioned on this show are pretty heavy and potentially triggering for members of the audience.  I don’t want anyone to be in a situation that’s too much for them, so I’m going to warn you right now that this episode of the show is going to be dealing with residential schools and the genocide of indigenous peoples in Canada.  If you’re not comfortable getting into that right now, please take the time to care for yourself.

September 30, 2021 was the first ever National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.  This was made into a federal statutory holiday in Canada, although we didn’t get any time off in Ontario because Ontario is one of several provinces which refuse to recognize the holiday.  September 30 was being marked as Orange Shirt Day since 2013 by Indigenous peoples in this country seeking to honor the survivors of residential schools and to commemorate those victims of residential schools who never came home.  In particular, it centers around the story of Phyllis Webstad, whose first-hand story I’m going to read for you right now:

I went to the Mission for one school year in 1973/1974. I had just turned 6 years old. I lived with my grandmother on the Dog Creek reserve. We never had very much money, but somehow my granny managed to buy me a new outfit to go to the Mission school. I remember going to Robinson’s store and picking out a shiny orange shirt. It had string laced up in front, and was so bright and exciting – just like I felt to be going to school!

When I got to the Mission, they stripped me, and took away my clothes, including the orange shirt! I never wore it again. I didn’t understand why they wouldn’t give it back to me, it was mine! The color orange has always reminded me of that and how my feelings didn’t matter, how no one cared and how I felt like I was worth nothing. All of us little children were crying and no one cared.

I was 13.8 years old and in grade 8 when my son Jeremy was born. Because my grandmother and mother both attended residential school for 10 years each, I never knew what a parent was supposed to be like. With the help of my aunt, Agness Jack, I was able to raise my son and have him know me as his mother.

I went to a treatment centre for healing when I was 27 and have been on this healing journey since then. I finally get it, that the feeling of worthlessness and insignificance, ingrained in me from my first day at the mission, affected the way I lived my life for many years. Even now, when I know nothing could be further than the truth, I still sometimes feel that I don’t matter. Even with all the work I’ve done!

I am honored to be able to tell my story so that others may benefit and understand, and maybe other survivors will feel comfortable enough to share their stories.

I’m going to put a link on the blog so you can read more about Phyllis and her background.  The Canadian Government chose to make Orange Shirt Day into a federal holiday.  I went to one of the ceremonies that was held here in Guelph, at the Sacred Fire in Royal City Park.  I listened to the elders, observed the ceremony and the drumming, inhaled the smoke from the Sacred Fire, personally confronted MP Lloyd Longfield once more about the water crisis on reservations, and generally did what I could under the circumstances.  There were a lot of settlers there, a lot of clapping, a lot of talk about reconciliation, and I was reminded of a quote by the African revolutionary Amilcar Cabral in which he exhorted fellow revolutionaries to “claim no easy victories”.  And it was all too easy for settlers, like myself, to watch the drumming, inhale the smoke, and feel righteous for simply caring.

There was a lot of high-handed rhetoric coming from public officials on September 30: talk about moving forward and re-building trust and just tons and tons of stuff about reconciliation between indigenous people and the settler-colonial state which continues to kill them.  As someone who participated in the Wet’suwet’en protests in early 2020, just before the pandemic hit, it was truly surreal.  Everyone back then was saying that reconciliation was dead and yet suddenly it’s back on everyone’s lips now, as though a new federal holiday could substitute for actual, concrete policy change…of which there’s been practically nothing.

This is what the Wet’suwet’en Checkpoint Instagram account had to say on September 30: “Reconciliation is nothing more than a catch phrase to the colonial government – and this day comes across as nothing more than a pacification.”

It’s notable that Justin Trudeau chose to go on vacation that day in Tofino rather than accept an invitation by an indigenous nation to honor the memory of the 215 children recovered from the former residential school in Kamloops.  As now, the remains of more than six thousand children have been unearthed on the sites of former residential schools.

With this in mind, it’s very hard not to view this new holiday as a PR stunt by the Canadian Government.  They were really on the backfoot after the Wet’suwet’en protests and now they’re trying to rehabilitate themselves and reclaim some of the legitimacy they lost amidst all the RCMP crackdowns and mass arrests that took place back then…and are taking place again at Fairy Creek.  They wanted to put reconciliation back onto everyone’s lips and make it seem like they care, despite having done nothing to alleviate the suffering of oppressed Indigenous communities.

As I took part in the event at Royal City Park, I couldn’t help but think of the word “catharsis”.  The event could have been framed as a way to “blow off steam” and vent emotion before effectively returning to normal.  Aristotle, that arch-misogynist and apologist for slavery, talked approvingly about tragic dramas that were put on once per year in the Athenian amphitheater; describing how they allowed men in particular to let their pent-up emotions go so they could be cool-headed and rational for the rest of the year.  It was like a social safety valve.  With regard to the truth and reconciliation ceremonies on September 30, not only settlers but Indigenous people as well, including residential school survivors, were given an official outlet for their grief, which Trudeau and his government hopes can be kept contained and manageable.

Another thing that the ceremony reminded me of was Edmund Burke’s political ideology of “reconciliation”.  Burke was the 18th century founder of modern conservative politics and sought to “reconcile” the masses of working class and oppressed people to the system by invoking the idea of a shared history and a supposedly “harmonious” past where everybody got along and knew their place.  It’s an inherently reactionary idea, but Trudeau is basically pushing the same thing here today.  Reconciliation implies that there was a time when settlers and Indigenous peoples lived together in peace, and that this time can be returned to somehow.  This is nonsense.  As some commentators pointed out on September 30, settler interactions with Indigenous nations were always characterized by colonial violence, culminating in the genocidal violence of the residential school system and other violent attempts to eradicate Indigenous culture and communities entirely.  There is no promised land to go back to or rebuild.  Any justice that we can forge will be in the context of a new system that allows justice to be built in this land.

Dismantling colonialism in Canada will be very hard.  Even though we’ve seen settler-colonial regimes fall in the past, they’ve been very different from the modern Canadian context.  Apartheid South Africa was propped up by a hyper-militarized settler minority that used brutal violence to suppress the Indigenous masses of Black South Africans.  Colonial Algeria in the 1950s was treated as an extension of France itself and had a White minority population numbering in the millions, yet the indigenous population still outnumbered it many times over and was able to fight for independence. 

In Canada the Indigenous population is a small minority, surrounded by great masses of settlers.  No country like this has ever successfully decolonized.  The genocide here was so bad that it reduced Indigenous people to minority status on their own land.  In terms of decolonization, we’re in uncharted territory here.  Settlers are going to have to be part of any anti-colonial liberation struggle, but for that to happen, settlers are going to have to want something better for themselves.  You cannot build a revolution on altruism.  Many struggles, from labor to the environment, are going to have to combine in the struggle for Indigenous liberation if justice is to be done and colonialism finally overthrown on occupied Turtle Island.

In this year’s federal election, the Communist Party of Canada campaigned on a “new, equal & voluntary partnership” that would recognize the right of nations within Canada to self-determination, up to and including secession and draft a new constitution based on an equal, voluntary partnership of Indigenous nations, Quebec, Acadians, and English-speaking Canada.  This was in addition to ensuring a just settlement of Indigenous land claims, respecting Indigenous rights under the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP) to veto pipelines and development on and near their lands, as well as enacting the Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and the Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.  This was the only electoral platform that I saw that really challenged the foundations of colonialism and called for radical change.  The empty words that most politicians speak about guaranteeing the rights of Indigenous people don’t mean much when the fundamental oppressive relationships of settler-colonialism remain intact, Indigenous people remain marginalized and the prisons remain packed with them.  Society as a whole needs to be re-structured for genuine decolonization to be achieved.  It’s not impossible, but for such revolutionary change to happen, all the peoples of this land have to want something more.

Monday, 27 September 2021

Confronting Sexual Violence

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Hello comrades and friends.  This is Back in the USSR on CFRU 93.3 FM.  I am Siegfried and it’s good to be able to return to you after the enforced absence of a very poorly timed federal election campaign.  As many of you will know, I was a candidate here in Guelph, running for the Communist Party of Canada, and it was quite the campaign.  We got decent media coverage, despite gatekeepers shutting us out of practically all the local candidates’ debates.  We reached more people than we did in 2019 and got more votes, even though the overall voter turnout was terrible.  Our message that people’s needs must always come before profit really resonated in the present political climate and the Communist Party gained ground across the country because of it – earning more votes and supporters everywhere we ran candidates.  Me and my comrades were able to do all this because we worked together.  We were a real team and we supported each other through all the challenges and difficulties. 

There is a reason why I was able to put so few episodes of this show out in the first half of this year, my mental health was absolutely shot.  I was a mess.  When the election was called in late August, I hadn’t even gotten a chance to re-connect with my friends and loved ones in the wake of the lockdown.  I remember being so afraid in the first part of the campaign; constantly worried that I’d fail to get enough signatures to get on the ballot and of letting everyone down.  I could barely interact with anyone socially, which is kind of a problem when you’re running in an election and trying to engage with potential voters.  But my comrades came through for me.  Everyone was so understanding and supportive.  We were able to work out a division of labor whereby other comrades could handle the stuff that I didn’t have the comfort level to take on – like approaching strangers with election leaflets outside the Guelph Farmer’s Market for example or buzzing property managers so we could deliver leaflets to apartment buildings.  It was also absolutely amazing to connect with people who were voting communist for the first time and were supportive of my campaign.  In the end, it was through the campaign and all the people who supported me that I was able to regain some of my self-confidence and work through a lot of my mental health challenges.  I’m so grateful to everyone.  You know who you are.  And I’m happy to be part of an organization that takes mental health seriously and actually makes access to mental healthcare a central part of its political platform.  That’s very important to me as I know it is for a lot of people.

But I don’t want to dedicate this show to the federal election.  Overall, it was pretty stupid, totally unnecessary and led to no real changes in Parliament.  That seems to be the general consensus anyway. 

I want to focus on the epidemic of sexual violence that exists in this country.  It’s a topic that I’ve never properly delved into in the history of this show, and that really needs to change.  When one in three women can expect to be sexually assaulted in her lifetime, we’re talking about a truly horrific situation that has deep structural roots in capitalist society and settler-colonialism. 

As of September 17th, upwards of 8000 students walked out of classes at Western University in London, Ontario to protest against sexual violence.  This action took place after upwards of 30 women were drugged and sexually assaulted at a party in the Medway-Sydenham Hall residence during the university’s orientation week. 

I want to let that sink in for a moment.  This is an absolute atrocity.  A male student was even murdered after he apparently tried to intervene to stop it.  This is what the students at Western were protesting when they walked out of classes chanting “stop this violence, no more silence.”

It’s absolutely horrific.  But it has to be understood that drugging and sexual assault are common occurrences, not aberrations.  There have been at least four reports of this happening at the University of Guelph so far this September, and there’s no way of knowing what the true number is because most incidents don’t get reported.  Just like incidents of domestic violence and rape are underreported.  The justice system in this country is not friendly to survivors, who are often not taken seriously or even re-victimized by the system.  This was pointed out by the one of the speakers at a solidarity walk-out at the University of Guelph this past Thursday.  They drove home the point that the cops don’t prevent rape and sexual violence, they only come in after the fact with a response that is itself often abusive.

While the solidarity walkout in Guelph was nowhere as big as the one in London, it was still impressive and a lot of students turned up to say that sexual violence needs to stop and that survivors should be believed and supported.  I was happy to see that a decent number of men showed up, even though the crowd was still overwhelmingly made up of women.  Another speaker at the rally, who was from Guelph-Wellington Women in Crisis, focused on how men need to stand up and confront the sexual violence and rape culture that is pervasive on college campuses and throughout society.  Toxic masculinity needs to be confronted by healthy masculinity whenever it shows its face.  And while they didn’t dwell on this point very extensively, it still really hit home for me.  Being a male ally is hard.  We’re living in a patriarchal society that doesn’t encourage men to take the voices and experiences of women seriously or challenge our friends when they engage in abusive actions.  I admit I’ve fallen short in the past and failed to stand up in situations where sexist behavior was being expressed by the men around me.  But it’s important to keep trying, keep caring, keep listening, keep asking for consent (always, always) and keep struggling for justice, safety, healing and equality for women – including queer women, trans women, racialized women, Indigenous women, and all women identified people. 

The toxic situation that we see with regard to gender-based violence is no accident.  It’s no accident that Indigenous women have been dehumanized and victimized to the extent that they have, when settlers from Europe seized their lands, trampled on their ways, and confined them to the margins of a society built on genocide.  They were seen as obstacles to broken down by violence and the colonists benefited from their marginalization on reservations and their imprisonment in residential schools.  Indigenous women continue to face violence and murder at a horrifically disproportionate rate because of what settler-colonialism did to this land.

In patriarchal societies the world over, men benefit from the unpaid domestic labor that women engage in and are willing to use force in order to keep those benefits along with unrestricted sexual access to the women they dominate.  This patriarchal control of women by men arose alongside slavery and feudalism in which lords and plantation owners controlled and exploited vast numbers of serfs and slaves for the sake of wealth and power.  It’s the same reason why capitalists exploit workers to this day.  Wealth and power are not things that any ruling group gives up without a fight, whether in gender or class terms.  Various oppressions intersect with one another: race, gender, class, sexual orientation, ethnicity etc. and all are based on keeping a certain group of people down so that another group may benefit from their suppression. 

Those young men who drugged and assaulted those young women at Western knew what they were doing.  I’m sure they felt powerful and in control.  They were taking what they wanted and enjoying it, not allowing any lack of consent to stand in their way.  They were “being men” as they understood it.  And this toxic masculinity must be opposed and defeated, because it ruins far too many lives.  Every woman who was targeted that night is going to carry this trauma with her for the rest of her life and no one deserves that, it doesn’t matter what they were wearing, or what they said or did.

As a Communist, I take the struggle for women’s liberation seriously.  It is central to who we are and always has been.  Every socialist revolution has elevated women, empowered them, and allowed them to seek out their potential while tearing down traditional barriers of patriarchy, and class and racial oppression.  Every socialist revolution has done this in a systemic way.  For all the good work that women’s shelters and organizations like Guelph Wellington Women in Crisis do in this society, they are few, underfunded and overly dependent on donations.  Contrast this with the Federation of Cuban Women which has branches in practically every neighborhood, a reserved bloc of seats in the National Assembly, and has the power to intervene in cases of domestic violence.  That and abortion is universally available in socialist countries like Cuba, unlike in Canada where the right to an abortion isn’t even guaranteed under the law, access to abortion is difficult, and women have to rely on the legal void opened up by the Morgentaler Case.  Cuba has confronted patriarchy as a matter of national policy since the 1959 revolution and the results are plain to see.  Women who have guaranteed access to housing, employment, medical care, education and genuine political/community support are unlikely to get stuck with an abusive partner or be vulnerable on the street at night.  When women enjoy real self-determination, society as a whole becomes a safe space for them and that’s when the real healing can begin.


Throughout the election, the slogan of the Communist Party of Canada was “People & The Planet Before Profits” and I believe that this is central to the struggle for women’s rights as well.  So long as society elevates exploitation over the needs of human beings, the vast majority of women are going to face oppression and abuse.  Survivors will continue to be faced with an uncaring justice system and the insult of universities like Western appointing committees and “task forces” to make it look like they are doing something for the women who continue to face the same risks every day.  What is needed is community, communication, accountability, justice, respect, consent and love.  The pandemic has shown us just how important these things are and how important it is that we build them up in our daily lives and organize and fight for them politically.  Women in Canada deserve all the guarantees that Cuban women currently enjoy and we must fight for these fundamental rights to be realized by all: from affordable housing to abortion access to the right to walk in safety after dark.  Having individual women in positions of political power does not defeat patriarchy.  Women as an organized whole must be empowered politically if patriarchy is to be overthrown and this is what Cuban women have done to a remarkable extent.  Community-organizing, political mobilization and the winning of concrete political gains that improve human life is what will counter and prevent sexual violence, not more police.  While sexual crimes such as a rape should be taken seriously and perpetrators punished, the real work consists of stopping those crimes before they even happen.

Women have the right to live in peace, as does everyone.  And that’s the message that one of my positive male role models, the communist Chilean singer/songwriter Victor Jara, conveys in this song: El Derecho de Vivir en Paz (“the right to live in peace”).

Michael Parenti - Male Terrorism and the Political Economy of Sexual Oppression