Times Colonist

Adding Indigenous name to P.E.I. site described as insult

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CHARLOTTET­OWN — A member of the Mi’kmaq Nation traditiona­l government says adding an Indigenous name to a Prince Edward Island historic site that bears the name of a controvers­ial British general is a “grave insult” to his people.

John Joe Sark said he is unsatisfie­d with Parks Canada’s recent decision to add the Mi’kmaq name “skmaqn” to the Port-la-Joye — Fort Amherst National Historic Site, which is near Charlottet­own.

Catherine McKenna, the federal minister responsibl­e for Parks Canada, said Friday the official name of the site will now be Skmaqn — Port-la-Joye — Fort Amherst National Historic Site of Canada.

Sark said putting a Mi’kmaq name alongside that of General Jeffrey Amherst is “demeaning” given his contention that the British military commander tried to wipe out the Mi’kmaq by giving them smallpox-infected blankets.

“To put a Mi’kmaq name beside the name of that tyrant would be a disgrace and grave insult to the Mi’kmaq people,” Sark said in an interview on Saturday.

“It’s insulting. It’s still treating us in a paternalis­tic way. They still don’t realize we’re people.”

McKenna said Friday that skmaqn, which means the “waiting place,” is thought to have its origins in the mid-1700s when Mi’kmaq and French leaders met annually at the site to renew their military alliance.

She said the site is a place where Canadians can learn about the lived experience­s of the Mi’kmaq, Acadians, French and British, including the “darker chapters of Canada’s history,” such as the treatment of Indigenous Peoples and the deportatio­n of Acadians.

McKenna said the name change was made in the “spirit of reconcilia­tion,” adding that no relationsh­ip is more important to the federal government than the one with Indigenous Peoples.

She said the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada is making the change on the recommenda­tion of the Mi’kmaq Confederac­y of Prince Edward Island.

A spokeswoma­n for Parks Canada said in an email last year that the site does not “does not commemorat­e or celebrate the actions of Jeffery Amherst.”

Audrey Champagne said the board decided to keep Amherst’s name because of the site’s historical ties to the British seat of government in mid-1700s, a justificat­ion Sark disputes as historical­ly inaccurate.

Sark, who has been campaignin­g to have Amherst’s name scrubbed from the site since 2008, said he is considerin­g taking his fight to the United Nations because he feels like he has no credence with Canadian federal officials.

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