While living in Owen Sound (1990 - 2001) I became very much
involved with the native people of the area. I helped form "Neighbours of Nawash" an organization to help bridge
the gap between the "white" population
and their aboriginal "hosts" .
Farmers' markets are generally more than just places where producers
and consumers meet to exchange money
for goods. Shopping is also a social activity where farm and town
people mingle. The Owen Sound farmers'
market is just such a scene. Saturday morning at the market was a
must for me and my spouse while we lived
in the area. Among our purchases was usually some fish, often some
of the best smoked fish that I have
ever tasted, sold by a native woman from the reserve at Cape Croker.One day, ten years ago, that lovely market became an ugly place.
A large group of mostly men who were
strangers to the market converged to threaten and intimidate that
one lonely native fish saleswoman.
Among this crowd drawn largely from the area's Anglers and Hunters
Club was the local MLA, Bill
Murdock, well known as an ardent supporter of Premier Mike Harris.
Last week (September 8, 9, 2005) the story of that event was
retold by this same woman at an event at the
First Nation reserve at Cape Croker. She spoke at the Ipperwash
Inquiry before the Honourable Sidney Linden
into the incidents of racism that had been plaguing the area. A
group of Native and non-Native people
gathered at the Cape, a beautiful peninsula that juts out into
Georgian Bay just north of Owen Sound and
Wiarton, to tell their stories.
I well remember that morning at the market. Some of us had heard in
advance that a "delegation" would
visit the market to confront the native fish vendor. A number of us
were on hand to surround and protect the
woman and her very frightened little daughter. We stood
shoulder-to-shoulder to face down the
delegation. Arguments started and for a time things looked ugly.
Bags of fish guts were thrown and nasty
words were yelled at the woman. Later some understandably angry
Native men arrived from the
reserve to give her support.
Those of us who were sympathetic to the Native people formed an
organization known as "Neighbours of
Nawash." It was our intention to create bridges across the gap
between Natives and non-Natives in the
Grey-Bruce area. Those of the Neighbours" who attended the recent
hearing found recalling those
incidents of racism very stressful.
The issue of fishing rights has been controversial, not only on
Georgian Bay, but also on Lake Huron on
the other side of the Bruce Peninsula. The Chippewas of Nawash and
their neighbours, the Chippewas of
Saugeen, have treaty rights to the fisheries in the area surrounding
the Bruce Peninsula. Until 1992,
these treaty rights had gone unrecognized by the Ontario Ministry of
Natural Resources, who had been
charging the Nawash with illegal fishing. In 1992 a federal court
decision upheld the Nawash fishing
rights, and directed the ministry to establish a fisheries policy
that had the following priorities: conservation, Chippewa fishing, commercial fishing and sport
fishing, in that order. The provincial
authorities were not amused and dragged their feet in the matter.
Sport fishing has had a significant impact on Georgian Bay. An
annual fish derby, the Salmon
Spectacular, brings hundreds of fisherman to the Bay and makes an
important contribution to the tourist
industry of the region.
At a press conference in August of 1995, on the first day of the
derby, Ralph Akawenzie of the Cape Croker
reserve announced that the Nawash would monitor the fishing during
the derby.
"We hope to come up with some very interesting
statistics" to back up the idea that "conservation is
a two-way street. It's not just the native people, it's
everyone," said Akawenzie. |
He stressed that the Nawash band wanted to avoid a
confrontation with anglers on the water, while underlining its
conservation concerns, and what it regards as the "unregulated"
state of sports fishing in Ontario. It was a very tense
situation. The Peace Brigade International, an organization
concerned with peace and justice, was invited to come and observe.
During a previous year's Salmon Spectacular, a number of incidents
were seen by the Nawash as evidence of a
violent backlash to their assertion of their fishing rights. Two of
their boats were sunk in unexplained circumstances, one was burned
down to the hull, several Nawash youth were stabbed in Owen Sound
with no charges being laid for ten months, and many yards of nets
were lost to vandalism.
This year, on the day the hearing was taking place at
Cape Croker, Jim Algie of the Owen Sound Sun Times
published a story on the state of the fisheries on the
Great Lakes, particularly Lake Huron and Georgian Bay.
He told about the precarious state of fish as foreign
species were introduced - deliberately as well as
accidentally.
The Salmon Spectacular depends on seeding Chinook
salmon into the waters of the Bay. This is largely
carried out by the members of the Fish and Game Club.
Salmon are fun to fish but they also are voracious
feeders that can devour their own weight in fish in a
day, thus depleting the indigenous fish population. The Great Lakes
Fisheries Commission is looking into
ways of enhancing the return of native species
particularly perch, lake herring, chubb and ciscoe. It
will be an uphill struggle to restore not only fish,
but also to make the waters of the Great lakes
ecologically sound. The Native fishers have been
highly cognizant of the fragile state of the fish
industry. Unfortunately, their efforts have been
largely ignored or derided.
Fishing is a sport, an industry, and an essential
livelihood for many who live around Owen Sound.
Fishing has also been a flash point for the underlying
racism that has so often flared in that area. The
sorry story of a posse of white men harassing a Native
woman who sold smoked fish is just one incident of
many that Ipperwash Inquiry had come to Cape Croker to
document.
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