'Cancel Canada Day' rally brings hundreds to Manitoba Legislature grounds
CBC
Hundreds of people clad in orange shirts marched through downtown Winnipeg late Friday afternoon to honour Indigenous children who died in residential schools.
The crowd left the intersection of Portage Avenue and Main Street at 5 p.m., and arrived on the grounds outside the Manitoba Legislative Building as a rally called "Cancel Canada Day" got underway.
Winnipeg police urged motorists in the area to choose an alternative route or expect delays during the march.
It's the second year that rallies were held in Winnipeg on Canada Day to call attention to the painful legacy of the country's residential school system.
On July 1, 2021, two statues of British monarchs were toppled during a rally aimed at replacing national holiday celebrations with actions in memory of hundreds of Indigenous children buried in unmarked graves at residential schools across the country.
A statue of Queen Victoria that was toppled and beheaded was deemed by the provincial government to be beyond repair and won't be restored.
Michael Yellowwing Kannon was beside the statue last year, taking photos as it was tied up with ropes and pulled to the ground.
"The sound of bronze breaking across stone felt like a tomb opening up, releasing all those residential school bodies," he said.
Yellowwing Kannon, a Sixties Scoop survivor, recalled the chants of "no pride, no genocide," that rang out last year. He said this year's rally is a continuation of the inflection point that occurred last July.
"This is something different," he said. "As the rest of the nation is doing their thing, we are celebrating our resilience against genocide."
Canada Day holds a different meaning for Jamie Couture following the discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves at the site of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School in May 2021.
"After they found a bunch of unmarked graves with our ancestors in them, absolutely it changed," she said.
Couture, who is Anishinaabe, said it was important for her two daughters to be at the rally.
She stressed the importance of knowing Canada's past, including the source of the pain for First Nations people, which is something she has dealt with during the two previous generations.