Workers Vanguard No. 1021
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5 April 2013
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Canada: Racist Hell for Native Peoples
The following article is reprinted from Spartacist Canada
No. 176 (Spring 2013), newspaper of the Trotskyist League/Ligue Trotskyste,
Canadian section of the International Communist League (Fourth
Internationalist). Recent demonstrations erupting in defense of Native rights
have rallied under the banner Idle No More.
The Idle No More protests have put a harsh spotlight on the
desperate conditions of Native people. Beginning late last year as a teach-in
organized by four Saskatchewan women in opposition to changes to the Indian Act
[adopted in the 19th century] and several federal government bills, the protests
spread like wildfire. Thousands of people in cities, towns and reserves across
the country mobilized on December 10 to demand recognition of Native rights. The
next day, Chief Theresa Spence of the Attawapiskat band in Northern Ontario
began a hunger strike. In the weeks that followed, rallies, teach-ins and flash
mobs popped up in cities from coast to coast, along with road and rail
blockades.
The protests have been fueled by the misery and racist brutality
that blight the lives of the vast majority of Native people. Whether on the
desolate reserves or at the margins of the cities, everywhere the aboriginal
population is plagued by unemployment, poverty, illness and homelessness.
Supplementing and enforcing this is a remorseless diet of racist police
violence. While making up less than 3 percent of the population, Native people
comprise a staggering 35 percent of the women and 23 percent of the men in
prison. Almost half of Native adults are unemployed and over half have less than
a high school education. On the reserves established to formalize their
dispossession, median family income is barely $11,000.
The backdrop to the spate of new federal laws further eroding
aboriginal rights is the government’s push to accelerate resource extraction in
areas where Native people are the predominant population and/or have
longstanding land claims. Some $650 billion worth of resource projects are at
stake over the next ten years. This notably includes the Northern Gateway
pipeline, which is opposed by most Native groups. Some of the new laws that
sparked the protests weaken or eliminate environmental protections. Changes to
the Indian Act allow for the surrender of reserve land without proper consent of
all those affected. Such measures will directly benefit the resource companies,
who long to get their hands on the mineral wealth from which they hope to reap
fabulous profits. And it’s all being done without any pretense of consultation,
much less the consent of the Native population.
The Idle No More banner was also taken up by the annual February
marches in remembrance of the aboriginal women who have been murdered or gone
missing since the 1990s, particularly in B.C. [British Columbia]. According to
the Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC), the number dead or missing now
approaches 600. The NDP [social-democratic New Democratic Party] has joined
NWAC, Amnesty International and other groups in calling for a “national
inquiry.” The ruling class cares nothing for the lives and deaths of Native
women. When they accede to calls for public inquiries, their purpose is to
channel anger into whitewashes that ultimately strengthen the capitalist state
by refurbishing its tarnished image. It is precisely the state—the prisons,
courts and cops—that is the main source of the repression of Native people.
A new Human Rights Watch report entitled “Those Who Take Us Away”
drives this home in wrenching detail. Dozens of aboriginal women and girls from
ten northern B.C. towns have faced violent abuse by police, with at least one
report of rape. The brutality includes young girls being pepper-sprayed and
shocked with tasers; a 12-year-old girl attacked by a police dog; a 17-year-old
girl repeatedly punched by an officer in the back of a police car; women
strip-searched by male officers; and women injured by excessive force during
their arrests. The researchers were “struck by the level of fear on the part of
women we met to talk about sexual abuse inflicted by police officers.”
Capitalism and Native Oppression
The legacy of colonialism, first French and later British, besets
Native peoples today. Through a combination of fraud, military conquest and the
devastating impact of disease following European contact, the pre-existing
aboriginal societies were destroyed and the foundations of Canadian capitalism
laid. Over much of the last century, a state policy of forced assimilation led
to the abduction of Native children from their parents and their internment in
church-run residential schools. The aim was to destroy the aboriginal languages
and culture. The architect of the residential school system, Duncan Campbell
Scott, Superintendent of Indian Affairs, laid this bare in 1920:
“I want to get rid of the Indian problem. I do not think as a
matter of fact, that this country ought to continuously protect a class of
people who are able to stand alone.... Our objective is 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....”
— quoted in E. Brian Titley, A Narrow Vision: Duncan Campbell
Scott and the Administration of Indian Affairs in Canada (1986)
The capitalist rulers failed to wipe out the indigenous peoples,
but a wall of racism and systematic deprivation keeps the Native population in a
state of wretchedness. Every year, exposés of the life-threatening conditions on
one reserve or another spark anger and media attention—to utterly no effect. In
late 2011, it was the turn of subarctic Attawapiskat. Theresa Spence and other
Native leaders declared a state of emergency to draw attention to the desperate
housing crisis there. Dozens of families were living in uninsulated tents and
shacks without running water or plumbing, some using buckets as toilets and
emptying them into nearby ditches. Another 128 families were living in homes
condemned because of black mould and “infrastructure failures,” meaning that
they were uninhabitable. The Conservative government responded by blaming the
band. Then they appointed a third-party manager against the band’s wishes and
ordered an audit.
The Harper Tories [Conservative Party of Prime Minister Stephen
Harper] have shown the same disdain for the recent protests. One could not read
a daily newspaper without seeing Spence vilified and portrayed as financially
corrupt (courtesy of the feds’ audit). Obscenely, she was baited as a terrorist
by the National Post (27 December 2012) and denounced a day later by the
Globe and Mail for using “coercion,” i.e., a hunger strike. Spence’s
hunger strike and the Idle No More protests became lightning rods for racist
filth in the gutter press and on the internet, sparking protests at Sun News
media offices in Calgary, Toronto and Winnipeg. As Toronto Star columnist
Heather Mallick put it, “it turns out that writing a column about Idle No More
and the ongoing battle by Indians in Canada for fair treatment attracts racists
the way a wet lawn calls out to worms.”
Reflecting an increasingly young Native population with few
prospects, the Idle No More protests were striking in their youthful makeup. The
protests were also fueled by growing discontent on the part of younger Native
people with the ineffectual Assembly of First Nations (AFN) leadership and its
cozy relationship with the federal government. This was symbolized by the outcry
against AFN national chief Shawn Atleo when he met with Harper in January
despite a boycott by many other Native leaders.
AFN leaders have also developed close relations with the RCMP
[Royal Canadian Mounted Police] and the Ontario and Quebec police. The
Toronto Star (15 February) outlined how in 2007 AFN leaders colluded with
the cops to undermine one of the largest Native protests in Canadian history,
the June 29 national day of action. This included “a joint media relations
strategy” and a cop placed in the AFN’s Ottawa office. Julian Fantino—then head
of the Ontario police and today a Tory cabinet minister—threatened Mohawk
activist Shawn Brant with “grave consequences” if he did not call off a
blockade. As the Star noted, the AFN’s collaboration with the police
“coincided with the start of a sweeping federal program of surveillance of
aboriginal communities and individuals engaged in land rights activism that
continues today.”
We Need a Revolutionary Workers Party!
The oppression of the Native population gives the true measure of
this racist society. In the course of Spence’s hunger strike, Liberal and NDP
politicians made their way to her camp for tear-jerking photo-ops. This should
fool no one. The Liberal Party ran Canada for the better part of a century,
overseeing untold state brutality and the systematic theft of both lands and
peoples. As for the New Democrats, their record is plain. In B.C. in 1995, the
NDP government organized what was then the largest RCMP/military operation in
Canadian history to evict a handful of Native activists from a ranch at
Gustafsen Lake. The RCMP and military created a war zone, and a bloodbath was
averted only because the Native occupiers left the area.
Native people need access to jobs at union wages and massive
education, health and housing programs, including the provision of clean water
and electricity. This is not rocket science, but the bourgeoisie will never
provide such necessities. Not far from Attawapiskat, where unemployment is 70
percent, a De Beers diamond mine generates over $400 million a year in revenue.
De Beers pays a lousy $2 million a year in royalties to the Attawapiskat Cree,
most of which is buried in stocks and bonds under a trust agreement—chump change
for this immensely profitable and wealthy corporation. Attawapiskat protesters
have blockaded the mine to press their demands for jobs, housing and
environmental protections. De Beers responded with an injunction from the
Timmins Superior Court accusing them of “extortion.”
There is a fundamental class divide in society between the
capitalists—the tiny group of families that own industry and the banks—and the
working class, whose labour is the source of the capitalists’ profits. The
working class has the potential power and historic interest to sweep away the
capitalist system and rebuild society based on a centralized, planned economy
that serves human need, not profit. It is this social power to stop the flow of
profits that must be mobilized in defense of Native rights.
A majority of the approximately 1.3 million aboriginal people in
Canada live in the cities, where the working class is concentrated. Put simply,
the future for Native rights lies with the class struggle. Labour’s struggles
and those of the Native peoples will either go forward together or fall back
separately. Trade unions including the Canadian Labour Congress declared their
solidarity with Idle No More. But this is light years from what is necessary.
The isolation of the Native protests from the social power of the working class
is a direct reflection of the fact that the labour movement itself is quiescent
and on the defensive. This sharply undercuts the possibility of any amelioration
of the conditions facing aboriginal peoples.
A fighting labour movement would not only use its power to champion
Native rights, but would take concrete steps such as aggressive union-run
recruitment and training programs. Such programs would be a first step toward
breaking the cycle of unemployment and social marginalization. Labour must also
be mobilized against acts of racist state terror to make it clear that Native
people do not stand alone in their struggles.
The fight against Native oppression provides a litmus test for
those aspiring to lead the working class. A party that does not inscribe the
defense of the most downtrodden high on its banner will never succeed in leading
the proletariat against its class enemy. We seek to build a revolutionary
workers party that champions the cause of all the oppressed in the struggle for
socialist revolution. To open up a future for the Native peoples will take the
establishment of an egalitarian socialist society under workers rule. As we
state in our Programmatic Theses:
“Only the destruction of capitalism can hold out the possibility
of voluntary integration, on the basis of full equality, for those aboriginal
peoples who desire it and the fullest possible regional autonomy for those who
do not. The Trotskyist League/Ligue trotskyste demands that whatever residual
rights Native peoples have been able to maintain, whether through treaty
agreements or otherwise, be respected.”
— “Who We Are, and What We Fight For” (1998)
The stark fact is that in this capitalist society—whether run by
the Tory reactionaries or their Liberal and NDP rivals—Native people have no
chance at a decent future. Only the destruction of the bourgeoisie’s barbaric
profit system and the inauguration of the era of socialist development can
redress centuries of crimes against the aboriginal peoples of this country.
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