Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 29, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A5
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I N January 2001, Izzy Asper met face to face
with former prime minister Jean Chr�tien in
Palm Beach, Fla., to discuss the establishment
of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights.
Over cocktails at his vacation home, Asper
asked Chr�tien to provide taxpayer support
for his legacy project. The prime minister was
supportive, but had one critical piece of advice:
Make it a private museum, outside the reach of
government and its political tentacles.
Chr�tien came by this
advice through painful experience.
In the late 1990s,
his government wanted to
put a Holocaust gallery in
the soon- to- be renovated
Canadian War Museum.
Veterans, along with some
blatant anti- Semitic forces,
rose up in protest. The controversy
grew so loud the
museum withdrew its plan.
It was a stark reminder governments
are not the best trustees of controversial
museum content.
Ultimately, unable to generate the resources
to keep it private, the Asper family was forced
to strike a deal with Ottawa that would make
the museum a national cultural institution. Even
though it is still a year away from opening, we
are seeing that Chr�tien's warnings were wellfounded.
Controversy erupted last week when it was
learned the museum is not using the term " genocide"
to describe Canada's treatment of aboriginal
people. CMHR president Stuart Murray
said senior staff made the decision without input
from the museum's board.
Currently, Ottawa has recognized only five
genocides: the Holocaust, the Holodomor, the
Armenian genocide, the Rwandan genocide
and atrocities in Srebrenica. There is growing
academic and activist support to have Ottawa
recognize the colonial experience of Canada's
aboriginal people - including the residential
school system, forced adoption of aboriginal
children and other policies designed to diminish,
assimilate or even extinguish indigenous culture
- as an official genocide.
The fact Ottawa has not recognized the aboriginal
experience in this country as a genocide
puts the CMHR in a delicate position. Academics
and activists have called on the museum to lead
rather than follow official policy. For now, it appears
the museum will live in an awkward place
somewhere in between.
For example, the CMHR plans to include
Canada's treatment of aboriginal people in a
scrolling list of atrocities on something called
the Recognition Wall outside the entry to a gallery
dedicated to the world's worst human rights
violations.
Inside, visitors will see dedicated exhibits on
the five officially recognized genocides. However,
there will also be a prominent exhibit on
Canada's treatment of aboriginal people. Murray
noted this exhibit will detail efforts to designate
human rights violations against aboriginal
people as a genocide. This, Murray wrote in a
letter to the Free Press , will help " raise awareness
about the nature of human rights violations
in our own backyard."
That will do little to satisfy critics of the
CMHR, who argue the museum has leeway to
make its own decisions about what constitutes a
genocide. And they will be correct in that assertion.
In fact, the CMHR will designate two other
historical events - the Khmer Rouge killing
fields of Cambodia and forced disappearances of
government dissidents in Guatemala - as genocides
even though Canada has not designated
them as such.
The museum said the majority of academic
research on these two incidents clearly justifies
use of the term genocide. Using discretion to
designate genocides abroad, and not using it to
assess a human rights violation at home, exposes
the realpolitik national museums face.
Technically, as a Crown corporation, the museum
operates at arm's length from government.
Decisions on content are supposed to be made
without interference from government policy.
However, as we've seen with Canada's war
museum, there are limits to that independence.
Most informed sources understand there will be
instances when the museum will either voluntarily,
or at the direction of its political masters,
defer to official policy.
That does not mean the museum has failed
those who seek greater recognition of this country's
abysmal treatment of aboriginal people.
It's important to note activists and academics
want, ultimately, official recognition by government
that the colonial experience of aboriginal
people in Canada constitutes a genocide. Few
would be satisfied if the CMHR alone bestowed
that designation and Ottawa refused to follow
suit. Although the museum can be a leader
in that discussion, the real goal is beyond its
authority.
In that context, the museum's pledge to
acknowledge and lead the debate on genocidal
designation is valuable. It is less than critics
want, but an important contribution nonetheless.
History has shown the Aspers did not heed
Chr�tien's warning. Current events prove the
value of the former prime minister's advice.
Now the museum needs to show that, its fate
having been sealed when the museum was made
a national cultural institution, it can overcome
the fate Chr�tien envisioned.
It must also accept this is not the last time the
museum will find itself out of step with either
public sentiment or official policy. Or perhaps
both.
dan. lett@ freepress. mb. ca
CMHR flap shows
perils of being
linked to Ottawa
Chr�tien's warning was prophetic
DAN
LETT
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