Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 15, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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MONDAY, JULY 15, 2024WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM ●
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NEWS I MANITOBA
Ottawa to apologize to Dakota, Lakota people
A
S the federal government pre-
pares to issue a formal apology
today to Dakota and Lakota First
Nations for historical actions taken
against them, two Westman chiefs say
it’s only the beginning of some hard
work needed to improve their commun-
ities.
“It’s been coming for a long time,”
Canupawakpa Dakota Nation Chief
Raymond Brown told the Brandon Sun
by phone on Friday.
On Thursday, the government an-
nounced Crown-Indigenous Relations
Minister Gary Anandasangaree will
travel to Whitecap Dakota Nation just
south of Saskatoon to apologize to nine
First Nations from Saskatchewan and
Manitoba.
Those communities are Birdtail
Sioux Dakota Nation, Canupawapka Da-
kota Nation, Dakota Plains Wahpeton
Nation, Dakota Tipi First Nation, Sioux
Valley Dakota Nation, Standing Buffalo
Dakota Nation, Wahpeton Dakota Na-
tion and Wood Mountain Dakota First
Nation.
While the media release does not
specify what the nature of the apology
is, Brown and Sioux Valley Chief Vince
Tacan told the Sun Friday that it is for
Canada designating Dakota and Lakota
peoples as refugees in the aftermath
of them coming north after military
conflicts with the United States in the
1860s and 1870s.
Sioux Valley is roughly 50 kilometres
west of Brandon, while Canupawakpa
is around 100 km southwest of Brandon
and just north of Pipestone.
The First Nations have long argued
against that designation, as they con-
sider the areas of what is now Canada
as part of the traditional territory they
held before the arrival of European set-
tlers.
On top of that, they believe that while
Canada does not have treaties with
them, the country should honour alli-
ances held with the British before Con-
federation, such as when the Dakota
helped fight against the Americans in
the War of 1812.
In 2008, Manitoba’s Dakota First
Nations rejected a $60.3-million settle-
ment offer made by the Harper govern-
ment that would have required them to
give up any challenges to future treaty
rights, land claims or hunting rights.
“This was our territory before any
Europeans arrived on this earth,”
Brown said. “That little magical line
between the United States and Canada,
to us Dakota, doesn’t mean anything
because according to the Jay Treaty,
we’re still in our own lands.”
Signed in 1794, the Jay Treaty be-
tween the United States and Great Brit-
ain included an article guaranteeing In-
digenous people free passage between
the U.S. and British North America.
Brown said the apology is a recogni-
tion that the history books do not tell
an accurate story about the Dakota,
adding that he is proud of his people’s
history.
“We’re not asking for all of Canada
back, we’re just asking for that recog-
nition that we are in our own lands.”
The chief said the apology will also
signal the start of work with the federal
government to negotiate rights Dakota
people do not have compared to those
who signed treaties with the Crown.
That process may take a couple of
years to complete, he said.
“Dakota will have our own status and
Canada needs to recognize that right
across this country, everywhere we go,
just like a treaty Indian,” Brown said.
Also reached by phone, Tacan said
that while Dakota contributions to the
War of 1812 were acknowledged in the
conflict’s bicentennial anniversary,
steps are only being taken now to rec-
ognize how harmful the refugee desig-
nation was.
“We’ve never considered ourselves
refugees, so it didn’t really impact our
resolve in that regard,” Tacan said.
“We had always considered ourselves,
first and foremost, Dakota people … It
is still good to get an acknowledgment
because the label was harmful in that
it allows governments, including the
provincial, federal departments and
even other First Nations governments
and entities, to marginalize us.”
He said Dakota nations received few-
er services and less land than First Na-
tions that signed treaties. This probably
held them back 70 or 80 years, Tacan
said.
Examples of this the chief brought up
were a lack of Dakota-owned casinos
in Manitoba and how Sioux Valley had
only recently been able to convert lands
it owns to reserve status.
Earlier this year, Tacan, Brown and
Chief Don Smoke of Dakota Plains First
Nation signed a memorandum of under-
standing to open a casino on land owned
by Sioux Valley near the corner of the
Trans-Canada Highway and Highway
21.
On the progress of that project, Ta-
can said he doesn’t know if it’ll come
to fruition by the end of his term next
year.
Like Brown, Tacan said what comes
after the apology will be critical for Da-
kota nations.
“There will be some work on the part
of Sioux Valley in advancing our claim
to get the land that we should have had,”
Tacan said.
“We need to receive the same bene-
fits as any other First Nation and we
also need to be part of the economy.”
Beyond compensation and land, Ta-
can hopes the apology will help dispel
the myth that Dakota fled the United
States and that they were refugees.
For Dakota Plains, around 130 km
west of Brandon, Smoke said today’s
apology will be the second they’ve re-
ceived in the last month.
In 1911, the City of Portage la Prairie
passed a motion banning Dakota people
from living in the city, banishing them
from land they owned within city lim-
its. On June 26, Portage council official-
ly rescinded the motion and apologized
for it.
For Smoke, the federal apology rep-
resents a continued opportunity for Da-
kota people to add their side of the story
to the history books.
“I feel like we’ve been treated as
second-class First Nation citizens for
far too long now, in an area we consid-
er our own unceded territory,” Smoke
said.
He agreed that the status of the Da-
kota people has deprived them of rights
others have, including those in Sec-
tion 35 of the constitution on the gov-
ernment’s duty to consult them when
carrying out business that affects them.
“The admission from the federal
government that we are from Canada
and we are a rights-bearing nation
and that we are entitled to Section 35
rights helps us to start to negotiate on a
nation-to-nation basis, as opposed to al-
ways being looked down upon as a sort
of foreigner or refugee,” Smoke said.
Brown, Tacan and Smoke said they
would be heading out to Saskatchewan
today for the apology with members of
their communities.
Smoke said it was going to be an emo-
tional day for him. Dakota Plains has
a hereditary rather than elected chief
and he said his late father, Ernest, al-
ways talked about securing recognition
of the treatment of their people when
he was chief.
“He used to say that (the treatment)
was because the Dakota people were
hard workers and we wouldn’t con-
form,” Smoke said. “We were independ-
ent and he used to say that the federal
government did not like that, they want-
ed us to be dependent on the govern-
ment like many others.”
Representatives for Anandasanga-
ree and Southern Chiefs’ Organization
Grand Chief Jerry Daniels told the Sun
they were unable to comment on Fri-
day.
Birdtail Sioux Chief Lindsay Bunn
declined to comment when reached by
phone and the Sun was told Dakota Tipi
Chief Dennis Pasha was busy organiz-
ing the community’s annual sundance
event.
The apology ceremony is scheduled
to take place at 9 a.m. Saskatchewan
time today.
— Brandon Sun
COLIN SLARK
TIM SMITH / THE BRANDON SUN
‘It’s been coming for a long time,’ says Canupawakpa Dakota Nation Chief Raymond Brown.
TIM SMITH / THE BRANDON SUN
Sioux Valley Dakota Nation Chief Vince Tacan: ‘We’ve never considered ourselves refugees.’
;