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Beverley McLachlin,
Chief Justice of Canada

The Civilization
of Difference
The fourth annual LaFontaine-Baldwin
lecture was delivered Friday night in Halifax by Beverley McLachlin,
Chief Justice of Canada
Special to Globe and Mail,
Mar. 7, 2003
Halifax - One problem, more
than any other, dominates human history - the problem of how
we deal with those who are different than us. Human beings share
a vast catalogue of commonalities. Our genetic differences are
negligible; women and men are equally creative and capable; those
we label as ill or old or disabled are no less virtuous, deserving,
or capable of contribution than others; and people from all cultures
and societies share similar aspirations to be safe, to be loved,
and to feel fulfilled. In sum, the similarities that unite human
beings by far overshadow their differences.
Why is it then that our differences dominate discourse on every
level - political, legal, social and domestic? Our headlines
tell the story. East against west in the cold war. Serb against
Croat in the Balkans. Hutus against Tutsi's in Rwanda- Burundi.
Barely do these crises subside that a new schism seizes the front
pages - fundamentalist Islam versus the western world. On the
legal, social and domestic front we debate our differences with
passion -- the right of women to equal pay, the legitimacy of
same-sex families, the place of religion in public life.
Tonight I propose to explore
with you this issue. Why does difference dominate? How can we
better manage difference? Canada, like other countries, has struggled
with these questions. Sometimes we have answered them with exclusion
and violence. Yet even in our beginnings we find another response
- the response of respect, inclusion, and accommodation. Accommodation,
in this context, means more than grudging concessions. Accommodation,
in the strong sense in which I wish to use it, means ending exclusion,
encouraging and nourishing the identity of the other, and celebrating
the gifts of difference. It is this response that has come to
characterize the modern Canada, shaping our thinking and our
policy on women, first nations people and the profusion of races
and cultures that constitute Canada in the 21st century.
I will return to the Canadian
experience. But first, let me take a few moments to explore the
underlying dynamic of difference.
The Dynamic
of Difference
Why, despite our manifest commonality,
do our differences, real and perceived, tend to define our world
and dominate our discourse and our conduct? Philosophers have
long debated the phenomenon. Jean-Paul Sartre wrote of the "other"
as the concept by which we define ourselves. In his book on identity
and language, Oneself as Another, Paul Ricoeur wrote of the
"work of otherness at the heart of selfhood." Michael
Ignatieff has written movingly of "The Stranger in our Midst"
in his book The Needs of Strangers, tracing the dialectic
of difference and need in history and literature. Despite their
varying contexts and perspectives, all agree on the essential
role of difference in human experience.
An answer to the question of
why we place so much emphasis on our differences lies in the
inescapable human need to construct one's identity within a social
context. For all the celebrated individualism of recent decades,
human beings are social beings. "A person only becomes a
person through other people," proclaims the African aphorism.
To be human is to communicate, speak, and relate to other human
beings. As Charles Taylor reminds us, group living is a prerequisite
to full human agency. Yet in this intercourse with others, we
are confronted by difference; and in the face of this difference
we are impelled to a sense of what distinguishes us as physically,
historically, and culturally unique. Indeed, we need this sense
of identity to make sense of our worlds. Yet identity does not
remain purely personal; identity itself becomes social. As we
discover our distinguishing attributes -- those elements in ourselves,
our history, and our culture that we value -- we bind ourselves
to others who share these attributes and values. In the process,
each person becomes a constellation of group identities - race,
ethnicity, language, gender, religion and a host of other affiliations.
Group identity is a good thing.
It binds us to a horizon formed by a common history and shared
memory in which we can orient ourselves and give meaning to our
lives. It tells us who we are and reassures us that we are worthy.
And it grounds our cultures -- the aggregations of norms, achievements,
and institutions that are peculiar to a people. So long as group
identity focuses on shared values, it is enriching and constructive.
But group identity can also
be a bad thing. The obverse of commonality is difference. To
say I am part of a group is also to say that I am not part of
a different group. From here it is but a short step to seeing
the different group as less worthy than the group to which we
belong. What we see in the other but not in ourselves may seem
strange and abject. The celebration of the attributes of one
group quickly slips into the denial of the attributes of others;
the affirmation of one group's identity into the undermining
of another group's identity. The positive "We are good",
becomes the superlative "We are best", with its implication
that those different from us are less worthy and less entitled
to the full measure of human dignity and respect. Differences
are magnified, even imagined, to serve the end of vaunting the
merits of the dominant group. In its ultimate manifestation,
this distortion of the group ethic results in the dehumanization
of those perceived as different. They are no longer perceived
as human beings, but as some lesser species whose rights may
be denied with impunity.
The negative aspects of group
identity tend to be self-reinforcing. Treating others as less
worthy or able makes us feel stronger, more righteous, more powerful.
We are doubly affirmed, first by our kinship with other members
of our "superior" group, second by the presumed deficiencies
of those outside the group. Treating those whom we perceive as
different or whom we do not understand with dignity and respect
is much more difficult.
The force of this dynamic of
difference should not be denied, but faced full on in its historical
reality. As John Ralston Saul stated in his 2000 LaFontaine-Baldwin
Lecture, "the past is not the past. It is the context. The
past -- memory -- is one of the most powerful, practical tools
available to a civilized democracy." The history of human
beings is the history of oppression based on real and imagined
difference. The Athenians invented democracy, but women and slaves
were not recognized as part of the polis. The Romans treated
the peoples they conquered as slaves. Medieval Christians crusaded
against the Infidel. Societies from Russia to India relegated
ordinary folk to the sub-human rank of serf or 'untouchable',
denying them the most basic rights and opportunities. And in
an atrocious distortion of group identity, the twentieth century
witnessed the calculated dehumanization and destruction of Jews,
gypsies and the mentally and physically disabled. We ignore this
history at our peril.
This past is not our past;
it is ever-present. Modern society condemns slavery, yet still
women and children suffer its ravages. The world community decries
discrimination, yet people are still treated as less worthy because
of their race, ethnicity, gender, religion or disability. In
Canada, we vaunt our multi-cultural society, yet still racism,
anti-Semitism and religious intolerance lurk in our dark corners.
The modern world holds out the promise of inclusion, but delivers
the reality of exclusion; the exclusion of refugees driven from
their homes; the exclusion of women and minorities from mainstream
institutions; even the more mundane exclusion of the schoolyard
bully. We proclaim the right of every human being to life, yet
so long as the memory of the events of September 11, 2001 remains
we cannot deny that the stark goal of eliminating those seen
as different dominates the agendas of many.
The imperative seems clear.
President Wilson's observation that "nothing . . . is more
likely to disturb the peace of the world than the treatment which
might . . . be meted out to minorities" is as true today
as it was in 1920. If we are not to perpetuate the tragedies
of the past we must tame the dark side of difference. But how?
Two solutions emerge.
The first solution looks at world history, deduces that human
beings cannot be relied upon to treat those different from them
with decency and dignity, and concludes that the only solution
is to separate groups within autonomous nation states. Michael
Ignatieff, in The Needs of Strangers, argues that ethnic groups
"cannot depend on the uncertain and fitful protection of
a world conscience defending them as examples of the universal
abstraction Man" and therefore must be secured "their
own place to be". The post-war creation of Israel and reorganization
of Europe along ethnic lines reflect this thinking. And it is
not without its virtues. As Georges Erasmus explained in his
2002 Lafontaine-Baldwin Lecture, self-rule confers a measure
of respect and cultivates self-reliance and dignity. The sense
of security gained from community self-determination is particularly
important in cases where the countries of the world have been
historically unable or unwilling to tend to the needs of given
minority groups.
Yet for all of its attractions,
the solution of finding an ethnic home for each of the peoples
of the world does not offer the complete answer. First, in a
world where most nation-states contain ethnic minorities and
global movement of peoples is the norm, the ethnically defined
nation state is difficult to maintain. Second, even if one could
achieve and maintain the ethnically defined nation state, this
would not prevent the confrontations between groups of states
and ethnic blocks that dominate recent history. Third, the ethnic
nation state solution only addresses part of the problem - the
political part. It leaves untouched and even threatens to conceal
other forms of discrimination and exclusion within the nation-state
because it says nothing about respect or the essential value
of human beings. Finally, as Alain Dubuc warned in his 2001 LaFontaine-Baldwin
Lecture, nationalism, "if it is exalted, can easily become
a tool of exclusion rather than a window on the world."
We should not abandon the idea of the nation state as one means
of attending to the struggles of a pluralistic democracy; to
quote John Ralston Saul in his 2000 Lecture, "[d]emocracy
was and is entirely constructed inside the structure of the Western
nation state." Yet if the goal is to address the negative
potential of group identity, the nation-state solution simply
cannot go the whole distance.
This brings us to the second
way of addressing the negative aspects of difference - promoting
mutual respect and accommodation within the nation state. This
approach rests on a single proposition -- the intrinsic worth
of every human being. In historical perspective, the idea is
revolutionary. Throughout human history, the powerful and privileged
have always treated those they view as different as less worthy.
When historians look back on the last half of the 20th century
and the beginning of the 21st, they will describe the idea that
all people are equally worthy as one of the seminal ideas of
our time.
Yet the ethic of respect and
accommodation possesses venerable roots. One hears its echo in
the declarations of western religion that all humans are created
"in the image and likeness of God". The European Enlightenment
contributed to the secular conception of fundamental human worth
by celebrating the universality of reason, and Immanuel Kant
urged that we treat humans as ends and never only as means. The
Romantic movement furnished a robust notion of authenticity,
premised on the idea that each person held a unique and intrinsically
valuable potential that would be unlocked through genuine expression
in life. These and other streams of thought converged and were
filtered through the horrors of the first half of the 20th century.
The result was a coalesced
notion of the intrinsic worth of all humans and a palpable sense
that social and political recognition of this idea was critical.
John P. Humphrey, one of Canada's great contributors to the project
of recognizing human rights, reflected this historical truth
when he stated that, although human rights did not figure on
the international stage prior in time, "[b]y 1945... the
historical context had changed, and references to human rights
run through the United Nations Charter like a golden thread"
(Human Rights & The United Nations: A Great Adventure, 12).
We can now look back to the ultimate product of the work of Humphrey
and others, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and find
the clarion assertion that "recognition of the inherent
dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members
of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and
peace in the world."
The new idea of the equal worth
of every person finds expression in the legal language of rights
-- human rights. If all people are equal, it follows that all
people are equally entitled to freedom, fair treatment, and respect.
The rights are easily stated. The more difficult problem is to
move them off the sterile page and into the reality of people's
lives.
Formal declarations of equality are not enough to remove discrimination
and exclusion. Indeed, they may perpetuate them. Formal equality
is the equality of "separate but equal". The group
is hived off, labeled "different", and told that they
are equal with one important qualification - equal within their
designated sphere. Cloaked by the facade of formal equality,
group difference perpetuates denial. Examples are not hard to
find. Formal equality allowed African Americans to live in forced
segregation for decades. In the eyes of many, it still justifies
treating women as different. You are equally worthy, these groups
are told. It is just that you are different. Understanding and
accommodating difference is essential to true equality. But when
differences are manufactured, exaggerated or irrelevant, the
result is to perpetuate inequality. True equality requires an
honest appraisal of actual similarities and differences - an
understanding of the context in which human devaluation occurs.
To make equal worth a reality we need more than what Michael
Ignatieff calls "rights talk". We need to look beyond
the words to the reality, or context of the individual and group,
to understand the other in his or her full humanity. This requires
an open and honest mind, a willingness to bridge the gap between
groups with empathy. Only when we look at the member of a different
group in this way are we able to give effect to the promise of
equal worth and dignity.
Understood in this way, rights,
like the nation state, create a protected space for difference
within society; a space within which communities of cultural
belonging can form and flourish under the broad canopy of civil
society. This applies to the traditional "individual"
rights which enable individuals to form and maintain the groups
that constitute civil society, to adapt these groups to changing
circumstances, and to promote their views and interests to the
wider population. Will Kymlicka states, "It is impossible
to overstate the importance of freedom of association, religion,
speech, mobility, and political organization for protecting group
difference" But a second kind of rights - group rights
- are also important. These are rights that inhere in an individual
not qua individual, but by reason of the groups to which he belongs,
like protections for minority language and religion. "[W]ere
it not for these group-differentiated rights, the members of
minority cultures would not have the same ability to live and
work in their own language and culture that the members of majority
cultures take for granted". Together, individual and group
rights contribute to an ethic of respect for difference and meaningful
inclusion of multiple "others" in a diverse society.
Rights that acknowledge people
as members of groups do not lead to a fragmented state. True,
they are important to the communities they protect. But they
also help us reach across the borders between groups and to establish
a civic community embracing sometimes profoundly different groups.
The language of rights can serve as a common language of understanding.
As Harvard Law Professor Martha Minow puts it, "[r]ights
provide a language that depends upon and expresses human interconnection
at the very moment when individuals ask others to recognize their
separate interests."
We must confront the dark side
of human difference. We must recognize the price the marginalization
of the other in our midst exacts -- a price we pay in the coin
of war, suffering and unrealized human potential. We must provide
refuges for our minorities -- the physical refuge of the protective
nation state and the conceptual refuge of respect and accommodation
embodied in the principle that all people, regardless of the
group to which they are born or assigned, are equally worthy
and equally deserving of respect. Only thus can we combat the
discrimination and exclusion that have marred so much of human
history.
The Canadian
Experience
With this backdrop in mind, I now wish to turn to Canada's experience
with the dynamic of difference and what it means for us as Canadians
as we enter the 21st century. Formed as it was from powerful
groups with different linguistic, religious and cultural attributes,
Canada, from its earliest days, recognized the need to practice
the habits of respect and tolerance and to enshrine them in the
law through the language of rights. In order to form a nation,
Canadians had to come to terms with difference by learning to
respect other cultural and linguistic groups and by expressing
a commitment to this respect through the provision of rights.
Yet Canada was born in an era of ethno-nationalism, religious
and linguistic intolerance, racism and gender inequality. These
aspects of our past manifested as exclusionary, assimilationist,
and discriminatory practices at various periods of our country's
life. We must also look at these dark points in our past and
be humbled by their existence. So a close examination of Canada's
past can disclose both a strong foundation in the ethic of tolerance
and inclusion, as well as the dark side of group belonging in
the form of intolerant treatment. I want to explore both of these
aspects of our heritage, in the hopes of ultimately demonstrating
that, as Canada has matured and grown as a nation, we have embraced
and cultivated the first of these traditions in order to do a
better job of confronting the second - we have learned to value
and institutionalize the ethic of respect for difference as a
means of combating exclusionary thinking.
Canada is one of the few countries
in the world which has from its beginning dealt with the issue
of minorities and sub-groups by the two-pronged mechanism of
the nation state and respect and tolerance of minorities within
the nation state. Most of the world's countries grew up around
and continue to adhere to the model of the ethnic nation state,
often in the face of diverse ethnic groups within their borders.
European nations like Germany and France still cling - with increasing
difficulty to be sure - to the ideal of ethnic nationalism.
Canada's history is quite different.
Other countries are only now awaking to the critical issue of
dealing with the other in their midst. Canada, by contrast, was
forced to come to terms with this reality from its very inception.
The peace accords that ended
the century-long wars between England and France in the late
18th century, left England in possession of France's former colonies
in America. Two of the most important - Quebec and the Maritimes
- lay within the territory of the future Canada. People in these
lands spoke a different language and adhered to a different religion
than their new rulers. England dealt with these two distinctive
colonies in different ways.
The first epitomized the ethnic-
exclusionary approach to dealing with minorities. England required
the Maritime Francophones, the Acadians, to conform, at least
to the extent of swearing oaths of allegiance to the British
Crown. The failure to conform, perceived or real, led to the
deportation of the Acadians to the United States and to far-flung
points of Europe. Many eventually found their way back, but only
after the separations and sufferings that inevitably follow such
dispersion. The treatment of the Acadians remains a paradigmatic
illustration of an exclusionary nation-state policy.
The Lower Canadian French population, on the other hand, was
too large and too firmly implanted to be uprooted and disposed
of in this way. England, having just lost the Revolutionary War
with the United States, had little appetite for another conflict
with its colonists in Lower Canada. And so, in the end, to truncate
a long and complex story full of historical intricacies, it acceded
to the demands of Governor Carleton (who camped three years in
London insisting on his position) that the French- speaking people
of Lower Canada be allowed to retain their language, religion
and civil law tradition. Although motivated largely by pragmatic
considerations, the product was a commitment to accommodation,
embodied in the Quebec Act of 1774 - respect and tolerance, implemented
through the mechanism of rights. Half a century later, discontent
with colonial strictures led to democratic movements and rebellion
in both Upper and Lower Canada. Lord Durham was sent out from
England to find solutions. Lord Durham's Report of 1840 turned
its back on Canada's history of accommodation and tolerance and
recommended return to an assimilationist policy that gave prime
place to England and English traditions. But, under the leadership
of LaFontaine and Baldwin, the colonials rejected Lord Durham's
vision of the assimilated unitary nation state.
The former colonies of Upper
and Lower Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick that met in 1866
and 1867 to create the country of Canada had learned a critical
lesson: the only way the new country could succeed was on the
basis of a constitution that guaranteed mutual respect and tolerance.
And so Canada was born, not of nationalism, but of the pragmatic
necessity to accept difference.
This beginning created the
space in which the colonies, soon to be joined by the colonies
of British Columbia and Vancouver Island, the prairie territories,
and later Newfoundland and Labrador, could come together and
grow. Confederation and the constitutional guarantee of rights
provided a mechanism through which the dialogue of accommodation
could be pursued - a dialogue that is still being pursued today
on all manner of subjects, from government provision of medical
care and federal-provincial views on the environment to the rights
of sexual minorities and Aboriginal land claims.
One of the most discussed issues
regarding group difference in Canada has been the provision of
guarantees for minority language rights. Language, as much as
any other feature, marks the minority as different than the majority
since language forms the basis of communication. Human beings
seem instinctively to view those who do not speak their own language
as outside their cultural group. It is thus no surprise that
despite the reality that many countries are multi-lingual, a
single common language continues to be seen by many as the essential
glue without which a nation will fall apart. Thus the distinguished
American historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. in The Disuniting of
America argues that it would be folly for the United States to
permit Spanish to achieve any sort of official status. Schlesinger
argues that "[i]nstitutionalized bilingualism shuts doors.
It nourishes self-ghettoization, and ghettoization nourishes
racial antagonism...Using some language other than English dooms
people to second-class citizenship in American society."
In fact, however, the Canadian experience with bilingualism can
be argued to support the opposite conclusion - that in states
facing the reality of widely entrenched linguistic difference,
recognition of the right to use minority languages furthers national
unity. Canada's minority language and religion guarantees continue
to serve their intended purpose - the purpose of providing security
to minority citizens that the majority will respect their identities.
Minority linguistic rights serve as a bulwark against fear of
marginalization, allowing them to participate as equal citizens
secure in the knowledge that they will not be excluded because
of their linguistic identity. The economic cost of bilingual
services is far outweighed by the benefits of inclusion. As Chief
Justice Dickson stated for the Supreme Court of Canada in 1990,
"any broad guarantee of language rights...cannot be separated
from a concern for the culture associated with the language.
Language is more than a mere means of communication, it is part
and parcel of the identity and culture of the people speaking
it. It is the means by which individuals understand themselves
and the world around them." To draw linguistic interests
into the protective embrace of the state is, therefore, a means
of expressing society's commitment to the integrity of cultures
and respect for the dignity of individuals.
Canada's foundation in the
ethic of respect and tolerance provided space for citizens of
two diverse cultures to work out their political, linguistic
and religious differences in a climate of mutual accommodation.
It did not, however, mean that the old exclusionary way of thinking
did not persist. Sadly, against the backdrop of our remarkable
history of accommodation and respect, Canada's first century
was marred by the ethic of the assimilation and exclusion of
peoples it slotted into special groups -- its first inhabitants,
the Aboriginal Peoples; immigrants of so-called "different"
races -- that is, neither French nor English; and the 52% or
so of the population who were women.
Our country's policy toward
the ancestral inhabitants of Canada's lands, the Aboriginal Peoples,
has throughout its history veered between exclusion and assimilation
on the one hand and respectful acceptance on the other. Prior
to Confederation, Aboriginal groups were more often than not
treated as autonomous nations. Indeed, the Hurons and Mohawk
nations played important opposing roles in the Franco-British
wars on what was to become Canadian Territory. But in the 19th
Century, as settlement progressed, exclusion, confinement and
assimilation came to dominate Canadian policy. The results, most
now agree, were at best a failure, at worst tragic. Only in recent
decades have First Nations people begun to reclaim their group
identity and their rightful place in our country.
The 1996 report of the Royal
Commission on Aboriginal Peoples laid bare for Canadians a history
which can without exaggeration be characterized as institutionalized
discrimination. The Royal Proclamation of 1769 recognized the
entitlement of Aboriginal Peoples to their lands and stipulated
that these must not be taken from them unless they consented
by agreement with the Crown. Translated into the Realpolitik
of the 19th Century, this meant the Treaty system, whereby the
Indians, as they were called, gave up right to their larger territories
in return for a small parcel of reserved land - the reservation
-- and minor gifts. In British Columbia, treaties were not entered
into; First Nations people were simply allotted parcels upon
which to live.
The second-class status of
Aboriginal Peoples was clear. In 1857 Upper Canada passed the
Act to Encourage the Gradual Civilization of the Indian Tribes
in this Province, which provided for the enfranchisement of Indians
of "good character" who would, thereafter, be declared
to be "non-Indian." The theory was clear. Aboriginal
Peoples were regarded as "uncivilized savages". The
only solution was to change them to "non-Indians",
or in words of Prime Minister John A. Macdonald to "do away
with the tribal system, and assimilate the Indian people in all
respects with the inhabitants of the Dominion." Following
passage of the first Indian Act in 1876, native cultural institutions
and spiritual practices came under attack. On the west coast,
the potlatch ceremony was prohibited. On the plains, the police
were called in to break up the sun dance, a ceremony thick with
cultural significance for the Aboriginal Peoples of the prairies.
In illogical locked step, assimilationist policies were paired
with exclusionary practices in the pervasive reserve system.
The very peoples the leaders were proclaiming should be assimilated
found themselves virtual prisoners on their reservations with
the Department of Indian Affairs adoption of the pass system
in 1885. The residential school system, established first in
1849 in Alderville, Ontario, and subsequently expanded, likewise
combined exclusionary and assimilationist impulses, with the
often tragic consequences that are only now coming fully to light.
Policies were no better in the early part of the 20th century.
The assimilation-exclusion model persisted. On the exclusionary
side, Canadian Aboriginals were not permitted to vote until the
1950's and 60's, unless they renounced their aboriginal status.
On the assimilation side, Duncan Campbell Scott, superintendent
of Indian Affairs, stated in 1920 that government policy was
"to continue until there is not a single Indian in Canada
that has not been absorbed into the body politic and there is
no Indian question and no Indian department."
The simultaneous pursuit of
exclusion and assimilation produced cultural displacement, marginalization,
and tragic loss of identity and self-esteem. The policy of exclusion
cut Aboriginal Peoples off from opportunities available to the
rest of the country. At the same time, the policy of assimilation
undermined their identity as members of a group -- their shared
history, language and culture. The good aspects of the group
dynamic -- a solid identity rooted in one's history and culture
-- were weakened; the negative aspects -- isolation, alienation
and lack of opportunity -- enhanced. Despite the often good intentions
of well-meaning men, it is difficult to conceive in retrospect
of a more problematic approach to the other.
One can only grieve the loss
to our country through the exclusion and undermining of Aboriginal
cultures. I grew up in a small community in southwestern Alberta.
A few miles from the school I attended lay the Reserve of the
Peigan Peoples, a tribe of the Blackfoot Confederation, which
had for centuries dominated the western plains area of what is
now Canada and the northern United States. Apart from the people
who came to work on the ranch from time to time I knew little
of life on the Reserve. My friends were my school friends. The
Peigan children attended a reserve school. Equal maybe. But definitely
separate.
In my final year of high school,
two students from the Reserve joined our class. They earned good
grades, starred on the basketball team, and excelled at art.
Both wanted to go to University. One, in particular, wanted to
become a lawyer. I remember George telling me of his dream; in
those days such an elevated vocation for myself had not crossed
my mind.
George, however, faced one
formidable hurdle. In those days, admission to University in
Alberta required a second language credit. The only languages
accepted were French, Latin or German. George spoke two languages
fluently - Blackfoot and English. However, despite excellent
marks in all other subjects, he could not pass the Departmental
exam for French. So George did not head off to University with
me in the fall. He went instead to Calgary to take special courses
in French. I do not know much of George's end. But I do know
that he never realized his dream of becoming a lawyer. Why? Because,
returning to the theme I took up earlier, the ethic of formal
equality was unable to comprehend his reality and accord him
his full worth and dignity. The loss was not only his; it was
ours.
Aboriginal Peoples responded
to the policy of assimilation-exclusion with "consistent
resistance", as Georges Erasmus explained in his 2002 Lecture.
Recent years have witnessed community renaissance. Aboriginal
Peoples have begun a process of rediscovering their traditions
and values, rebuilding communities, and exploring and sharing
their cultures. Constitutional protections have been extended
to the Aboriginal community, providing a legal safe-haven in
which Aboriginal group interests can flourish. On the non-Aboriginal
side, paternalism and exclusion are increasingly being replaced
by respect and accommodation. To quote Georges Erasmus once more:
"[g]aining recognition of Aboriginal rights in the courts
and entrenchment in the Constitution have been critical to restoring
Aboriginal peoples as active agents in directing our collective
lives."
Canada's history of minority
exclusion and marginalization of those belonging to groups labeled
"different" is not confined to the Aboriginal community.
Chinese-Canadians came to Canada to help build our railroads.
Their task completed, they found themselves burdened with oppressive
and discriminatory laws. Head taxes were imposed on entry. Impediments
to the immigration of women were adopted. The lack of Chinese
women in turn gave rise to irrational fears that Chinese men
would prey on white women, and led to prohibitions on the employment
of white women by Chinese men.
Black Canadians too felt the
cold touch of exclusion and racism. Between 1792 and 1783 about
3,500 blacks, most former slaves who had fought for Britain in
return for freedom, fled to what is now Nova Scotia and New Brunswick
at the close of the American Revolution. Once in the Maritimes,
they were cheated of land, forced to work on public projects
like road building and denied equal status with whites. Disappointed,
1,190 men, women and children left Halifax on 15 ships for Sierra
Leone. Sixty-five died on route. In 1796 six hundred Maroons
- people with a long tradition of resistance to European rule
- arrived in the Maritimes to face the same miserable conditions
as the freed American revolutionaries. They too left for Sierra
Leone. In 1814-15, 3,000 or so American black refugees from the
war of 1812 settled in the Maritimes, and in the 1920's hundreds
of Caribbean immigrants, called "later arrivals", came
to Cape Breton to work in the mines and steel mills. Quebec and
Ontario saw similar migrations, and black colonies were established
in the west of Canada. Black people came to Canada expecting
respect and accommodation. They found little of either. Despite
the abolition of slavery in 1833, black Canadians found themselves
excluded from schools, churches, restaurants, hospitals and public
transportation, and denied equal housing and employment opportunities.
The list of racial groups that
have suffered exclusion and discrimination goes on and on. Ukranian
Canadians were interned in World War I. Japanese Canadians, as
well as men of German and Italian origin, were sent to camps
during World War II. Well into the 20th century Anti-Semitism
forbade Jewish Canadians from holding property in designated
areas. And in a dramatic expression of intolerance and lack of
respect for the "other" who is labeled as different,
legislation in the mid-twentieth century permitted the eugenic
policy of sterilizing people deemed mentally deficient.
Perhaps the most far-reaching example of exclusionary-thinking
is the history of our treatment of women. Women make up 52% of
the Canadian population. Yet for much of Canadian history, women
have been relegated to an inferior status in society. Why? Again
the familiar premise - women are different. The obvious biological
difference between men and women was extrapolated to apply to
all forms of feminine functioning. Women had smaller and less
clever brains. Women were congenitally weaker. Women functioned
emotionally; only men could think. From here it was but a short
logical leap to conclude that women should not be permitted to
vote or practice medicine or law and should be barred from public
office. The effect of these illogical leaps into stereotype was
to deny women first-class status. Their identity as thinking,
responsible human beings was challenged, their humanity denied.
People perhaps, full persons, certainly not.
Women in Canada, as elsewhere
in the western world, began to challenge these assumptions at
the end of the 19th century. They fought for legal rights and
they won them. It took a long time. Canadian women did not win
the right to vote in federal elections until 1920. And it was
only in 1929, with the now-famous "Persons Case", that
the law recognized that women were "persons" entitled
to hold public office.
However, as with the struggle
of Aboriginal Peoples, legal equality for women did not translate
into actual equality. Old ideas die hard. In the minds of many,
women remained a fundamentally different kind of human being,
with corresponding fundamental limitations. Women were fit for
domestic roles, fit to serve as secretaries and nurses and other
kinds of assistants. They clearly were not, however, up to the
big jobs. This exclusionist thinking was buttressed by ingrained
attitudes that the primary place of women was in the home with
the children. Women who wanted to serve in law, medicine or politics
could attempt to do so, but they faced an up-hill struggle against
the prevailing attitudes of the day and seldom got to the top.
The difficulties they faced led to statements like that of French
journalist Francoise Giroud, "Women's problems will be solved
when a mediocre woman holds a major job."
It is now widely accepted that
there is no justification for sweeping negative generalizations
about the ability and temperament of women. It is accepted that
women can and do play with equal effectiveness in all walks of
life. And it is accepted - by many if not all - that cooking
and childcare is not an exclusively feminine gift; men too can
enjoy and excel in these activities. Why then did we persist
so long in our belief that women were fundamentally unsuited
for anything but working in the home and assisting men in grander
pursuits? The answer brings us back to the dynamic of difference.
Instead of evaluating the differences between men and women honestly
and with an open mind, people magnified those differences and
extrapolated them into conclusions which bore no relation to
the actual abilities of women and paid no respect to their right
to choose their path in life. In a word, stereotype transmuted
into popular, hence unassailable, wisdom. Myth supplanting reality
shut women out.
Why did the myth of female
inadequacy persist so long? Why indeed does it still exert a
tenacious power over our deepest attitudes and actions? Why can
we not simply acknowledge, as we increasingly do with ethnic
minorities, that the biological differences between men and women
should not limit their place in society? Why, in short, can we
not, where women are concerned, move from an exclusionary mentality
to and inclusionary mentality? The answers are complex. Social
and religious institutions may buttress an exclusionary mentality,
as may the very structures of our institutions.
For example, many Canadian
offices and workplaces continue to be organized on the Edwardian
model of a century past. The family breadwinner (presumptively
Papa) is expected to available for work and travel at any time.
This is made possible because the family homemaker (presumptively
Mama) devotes her exclusive efforts to the home and family. This
model no longer fits the reality of Canadian families, where
increasingly both parents must work outside the home to earn
the necessary income and both parents are involved with domestic
and child-rearing tasks. We are beginning to explore ways to
bring our workplace organization into sync with the reality of
our lives - day care centres on the jobsite, childcare programs,
flex time and working from home are among the options being explored.
So long as we organize our workplaces on Edwardian lines, women
will find themselves at best stressed and at worst falling back
into the default role of sole domestic care-giver, reinforcing
the old attitudes.
Workplace organization is important.
But so is workplace culture. "Why", I recently heard
the senior partner a national firm lament, "do so many women
leave the firm after only a few years? They are among the brightest
of our young recruits. We invest in them. We give them flex-time.
Yet they leave in greater numbers than their male counterparts,
usually for another job that entails just as much work. We know
where they go but we don't know why."
It would be presumptuous of
me to venture an answer to this honest and important query. Yet
I am struck by an observation I recently heard - to be happy
in a workplace one needs friends and at least one mentor. Here
we encounter another aspect of finding a place for minorities
in majoritarian institutions, be the minority a racial minority,
a religious minority or a gender minority. The minority person
may find the workplace culture hostile or at very least, less
than comfortable. Sexual harassment was once common and tolerated
in the workplace culture; it is now legally and socially taboo.
Yet in more subtle ways, the minority employee may come to feel
devalued. People need support. People need mentors. Members of
workplace minorities may find less support and fewer mentors
than members of the workplace majority. We should not be surprised
if they then seek more supportive environments. The lesson is
simple. Prohibition is not the only way to exclude. The other
in our midst may be excluded or marginalized in much more subtle
ways.
If Canada has not won the war
against the exclusion of women, we have fought the first important
battles. We have rejected the exclusionary politics that once
denied women access to the levers of influence, power and full
societal participation. We lead other nations in the opportunities
we open to women. We have more senior female judges, more female
university professors, more practicing physicians than many western
countries. Personally, I believe that in my own profession, the
law, it is easier for a woman to succeed in Canada than almost
anywhere else. Yet despite these achievements -- and they are
not inconsiderable -- we still have terrain to take. Women's
equality issues remain very much alive. Few women occupy the
highest seats of political office and commerce. Statistics Canada
tells us we have not achieved pay equity. And violence against
women is a persistent problem.
Canada's record on the treatment
of Aboriginal Peoples, racial minorities and women -- not to
mention gays and lesbians -- teaches us that notwithstanding
our nation's foundation in the ethic of tolerance and accommodation,
we are not immune from the evils of exclusionary thinking. The
natural inclination of the majority and the powerful to see the
minority and less powerful as less worthy and less entitled to
share in all aspects of the country's life, has repeatedly surfaced
on Canadian territory. We devalued Aboriginal Peoples, ethnic
minorities, disabled people, and women, much as others elsewhere
devalued the same groups. This must not be minimized. Yet from
this complex and troubling history, we are slowly progressing
towards a society where all people are fully valued, whatever
their race, religion or gender. Since the Second World War and
the international acknowledgment of the equal worth of all and
the concomitant right to equal treatment, Canada has moved more
quickly than many other countries to a more inclusionary, respectful
model of society.
The law, while not the entire
answer, has played a pivotal role in this progression. Canadian
legislators reacted swiftly in the wake of World War II and the
horrors of the Holocaust to protect minority rights. In 1944
Ontario passed the Racial Discrimination Act which prohibited
the publication or dissemination of materials that expressed
racial or religious discrimination. In 1947, the Saskatchewan
Bill of Rights Act began a revolution in legislation that sought
to be broadly protective of rights and civil liberties. These
legislative innovations dove-tailed with the momentum building
at the international level around the adoption of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. In 1962, the first Ontario Human
Rights Code proclaimed "the inherent dignity and the equal
and inalienable rights of all members of the human family"
. . . "in accord with the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights as proclaimed by the United Nations." Nova Scotia's
Human Rights Act came in the next year, followed by Alberta,
New Brunswick, and P.E.I. By 1973, all provinces had enacted
human rights laws and in 1976, the federal government followed
suit.
The adoption of the Charter
of Rights and Freedoms in 1982 elevated the basic human rights,
aboriginal rights and equality to the status of supreme law,
against which all government actions and legislation must be
assessed. The Charter stands as Canada's ultimate expression
of our commitment to freedom and human dignity.
The Charter has had a monumental
impact on Canadian law and, indeed, in what Kent Roach has called
a "heavy export trade in the Charter," the law of other
countries. Yet the Charter is more than a litigation tool or
a lawyer's text. A glance at our newspapers shows the extent
to which the Charter, and the values and principles it embodies,
have been internalized by Canadians. Alain Dubuc has argued that
the speed and readiness with which the rights enshrined in the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms were taken up by Canadians was
the product of an abiding national insecurity about our identity.
I prefer to think that the Charter manifests an ethic of respect
and inclusion that has been part of Canada's fabric from its
beginnings, and the way in which Canadians have embraced the
Charter demonstrates its tremendous resonance with our country's
identity. As I have tried to show, in Canada a unique political
and cultural history is intertwined with a universalized ethic
of respect and accommodation. The former constitutes our roots
and shows us the path we have traveled as a nation. The second
expands our sense of ourselves by including a commitment to respect
for all kinds of difference in an unknowable future. Both are
now immutable aspects of our Country's identity, and both are
reflected in the Charter.
In this way, the Charter, more
than any other document, expresses the Canadian ethic, the country's
sense of itself. The Charter also provides all of us, regardless
of race, religion, or gender, with a secure space in which to
realize our aspirations. Finally, the language of the Charter
provides a common vocabulary in which we can cast our various
perspectives, giving all Canadians access to the public space
in which some of our country's most difficult and contentious
issues are debated. The Charter has not created consensus. But
by expressing our most fundamental values -- above all the respect
we hold for others, regardless of their differences -- it has
strengthened us and given each of us a place to stand. And by
giving us the common vocabulary of rights it has provided a forum
for understanding one another's circumstances and working out
the accommodations so essential in a diverse, multi-cultural
society.
The Charter protects difference. But, independent of any particularized
rights, respect for minorities has become an inseverable component
of our constitutional fabric. On August 20, 1998, the Supreme
Court of Canada rendered its decision in the Reference re: the
Secession of Quebec. Noting our long tradition of protecting
minority rights, the Court recognized the protection of minorities,
along with federalism, democracy, constitutionalism and the rule
of law, as one of the foundational principles subtending our
constitutional architecture.
Canada, as a nation grounded
in difference and respect, has erected an impressive legal structure
to protect difference. But this structure is not merely law.
This is no alien, imposed legal order. It is a structure that
expresses our history of respecting minorities and our ever-strengthening
commitment to the policies of inclusion and accommodation and
to the belief in the fundamental dignity and worth of each human
being. Inclusion and equality cannot be achieved by mere rights.
But when the rights reflect a nation's values and are accepted
as a means of brokering our differences and finding accommodation,
they take on profound importance. And when we add to the mix
attitudes of tolerance, respect and generosity - attitudes which
Canadians possess in good measure - the prospects become bright
for the inclusive society of which we dream. Michael Ignatieff
writes in The Needs of Strangers that "Love ... is perhaps
the most desperate and insistent of all human needs. Yet we cannot
force someone to love us. We cannot claim love as a human right."
My hope is this. If we cannot
claim love, we must strive for respect and accommodation. And
as national ambitions go, that's not bad.
© 2003 Bell Globemedia
Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Truth can never be
told so as to be understood, and not be believ'd. William Blake, The Proverbs of Hell
Truth suppress'd, whether
by courts or crooks, will find an avenue to be told. Sheila Steele, injusticebusters.com
If you hold the mouth
of Truth, It will burst out its rib-cage. Somali proverb
Publisher : Sheila
Steele
Got something
to say about this or any other stories on this site? Go to injusticebustersblog Participate!
- injusticebusters
court advice :
- How to walk yourself through the justice system
-
- Why you should dump your preliminary hearing (written July 1998 and still valid)
-
- Sermonette:
The
Naked Truth -- (You
will find links to many more sermonettes in the sidebar on this
page
Another target
of Dueck's malice: : Wilf Hathway
Our activism
contributed greatly to the good vibes which happened around the civil
trial.
Index
to the stories on this website
This is not
regularly updated so if you are looking for a particular story
and you have a name or keyword, please use the site search engine(at
the bottom of the page) which IS regularly updated
Index to Saskatoon Police stories
This is a pretty good scrapbook
for the 1998-2002 period.

Inquiry into the malicious prosecution of David
Milgaard untanling 36 years of Saskatchewan police and Crown
misconduct: : Opening day 1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
| 7 |
-
- Stephen Williams:
Canadian writer subject to Stasi-like treatment by Canadian police
- Terry
Arnold: : Snitch a
suicide?
- RCMP
scenario stings: Brian
Hutchinson starts digging
- Gary
wells: Faulty eye-witness
testimony
-
- Tulia,
Texas
- Gilmer,
Texas
- Willie
Upshaw
- Wrongfully convicted in Canada
- Foster Parent false accusations
- Martensville
- Don
Smith obscenity trial: an obscene conviction
- James
Lockyer
- Hurricane
Carter
- Johnny Cochran speaks up for
Bill Sampson
- Vopnis
- Abdulai
Mohamed

The Terrible Story behind the Atif Rafay and
Sebastian Burns convictions

Trial
set for June 15
We
know part of this disclosure is a forged statement and perjured
affidavit from a Winnipeg cop
-
-
-
-

The
Crown is still fighting Fred Poirier -- and they are losing.
Secret Commissions Case from Northern B.C.
-
-
- 2005: In
the United States the proven wrongful convictions just keep coming
at us!
Canadians who
have been wrongfully convicted because of improper investigations
combined with zealous Crown
A round-up of wrongful convictions in Canada
- Robert
Baltovich
- Michael Burns
- Sebastian Burns
- Rodney
Cain
- Wilbert
Coffin
(hanged, 1953)
- Jason
Dix
- Jim
Driskell
- Jody
Druken
- Randy
Druken
- Hugues
Duguay
- Michel Dumont
- Peter
Frumusa
- Walter
Gillespie and Robert Mailman
- Clayton Johnson
- Yvonne Johnson
- Herman
Kaglik
- Darren
Koehn
- Kulaveeringsam
"Kulam" Karthiresu
- Stephen Leadbeater
- Donald Marshall
- Chris McCullough
- Michael
McTaggart
- Felix
Michaud
- David Milgaard
- Guy
Paul Morin
- Shannon
Murrin
- Jamie
Nelson
- Greg
Parsons
- Benoit Proulx
- Atif Rafay
- Louise
Reynolds
- Thomas
Sophonow
- Gary
Staples
- Billy
Taillefer
- Steven
Truscott
- Joe
Warren
- Leon
Walchuk
-
- AIDWYC
- Innocence Project (Canada)
- Innocence Project (U.S.)
- Northwest Law Center on Wrongful Convictions
-
- Kirstin Lobato
- Jeffrey
Scott Hornoff
- Willie
Upshaw
- Hurricane
Carter
- Guildford
4
- Birmingham
6
- Amirault
- Houston
- U.S. wrongful convictions:
Exonerateed
- Laurence
Adams
- Ludrate
Burton
- Stephen
Cowans
- Wilton
Dedge
- Albert
Johnson
- Kenneth
Marsh
- Dwayne
McKinney
- James Bernard Parker
- Peter
Reilly
- Peter
Rose
- Sylvester
Smith
- Clifford
St. Joseph
- John
Stoll
- Marty
Tankleff
- Wilton
Dedge
- Ray
Krone
-
- Still working on it:
- Dennis Deschaine
- Dennis
Perry
- Tim
Sandfort
-
-
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Revitalizing the
archives
From 1998 until
2002, injusticebusters was in the throes of identity crisis.
What was it? What were we doing? We grappled with editorial policy
at the same time we were learning the nuts and bolts of building
and posting a website. Once we had a secure, paid site I had
full editorial control, although I talked regularly to Richard
Klassen who was forced to move his family several times and did
not always have access to the internet. Rick's pages: one | two
We posted our
earliest and later actions.
Early versions
of the site can be found on the Wayback Machine.
I began following
other threads to stories of police and prosecutorial misconduct
and the site's character took on another facet: a newsclipping
scrapbook where stories could live longer than they would in
print form. I also began picking up other stories of wrongfully
convicted people. It was an explosion. By 2003 there were over
700 pages. I also had contact with several other people (Don Smith, Leon Walchuk, Monique Turenne, the Vopnis) and kept these stories
going.
It was the
story of the Ross children's treatment at the hands of the Saskatchewan
government which grabbed the attention of The
Fifth Estate.
The civil claim (The $10M Lawsuit as we called it) was only mentioned
briefly at the end of their show which aired in November, 2000.
When Richard
Klassen began to make progress in bringing his civil claim to
court, the government and police defendants alleged he was breaking
the rules of court by publishing discovery material on the internet.
- MacNeil clinic (the document which started it all)
- The Thompson Papers
- Carol
Bunko-Ruys reports
This claim
was absolutely false. However, rather than risk being thrown
out of his civil claim, Klassen undertook before Judge Mona Dovall
to sever all ties with the website.
The court fights:
- Les
Perreaux report
- QB271
These pages have links which
lead to other pages from that era. Now that some of the dust has settled,
I have been going back through the material we had posted in
the early days. In the spirit of keeping the scrapbook alive,
I have been reformatting and placing links. The original material
remains intact. I hope the information, which chronicles our
struggle is useful to you.
The identity
crisis is over. We know who we are --Sheila Steele, March
28, 2005
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Blogging
Blogging has been in the news.
It is the new, trendy thing with 40,000 new blogs being created
each day. I established a blog for this website last September
and it is now "taking off." These are a few of the
pages with ongoing discussions.
- Tasering Mary Lutz
- Saskatchewan Centenary
- Quint Blog discussion
- Rotten apples in the Saskatoon Police
- Blogging for choice
- Michael Cardamone witch hunt
- Implement recommendations of public
inquiries
- Stealing from the poor
- Vancouver's killer cops
- Tisdale rapists appeal
- Winnipeg police misdeeds
- Milgaard Inquiry
- Chief Sabo: can he be trusted?
- The Old Boys' Club Must Go!
- Vancouver activists
- John Hudak: Falsely accused mountie
- City of intolerance
- Constable Larry Lockwood: Exciteable!
- Eric Cline
This is a great way for like-minded
people to communicate and share our views. It is easier than
making a website and marginally more difficult than a forum.
People who want to contribute
simply have to punch the "comment" link and they will
be taken to a page with a box which allows them to write their
comment, preview and post it. It takes a while for the comment
to show up and some people get impatient and repost. That's fine,
I trash the duplicate posts and no harm done.
Please, please give it a try.
The internet is distinguished from other media in that it is
really and truly interactive. Blogging makes it possible to express
your viewpoint even if you don't have a computer. You can go
to the library or a friend's place or an internet cafe. Once
you've mastered the basics (and believe me, if I can do it, you
can do it) you will be participating in one of the most democratic
-- and potentially powerful -- media the world as we know it
has ever seen.
Come on. Don't be shy. Join
the Weblog World! -- Sheila Steele, March 20, 2005
Toronto Police paid out $30M in secretly resolved
claims over last five years
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