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June 12 Canadian PoliticsToronto, June 11, 2008 - Copyright © 2008 S. A. Erdelyi
The speeches delivered by heads of states are written for them by speech writers.
This is not to take anything away from the Rt. Hon. Steven Harper, Prime Minister of Canada, who read the Canadian Government’s apology to the First Nations’ (aboriginal people) survivors of a century of wrong doing by previous Canadian Governments and religious orders. He might not have written it – but he read it into the annals of history.
It took courage and sincerity, something dozens of earlier governments and prime ministers did not have!
June 11, 2008 was a special day in Canadian history. A century of wrong-doing was addressed in the House of Commons, as the lower house of the Canadian Parliament is called, with representatives of Canada’s Fist Nations in attendance.
What were missing were the representatives of those religious orders, and their members that abused those innocent children!
Perhaps another Century needs to pass, before any apologies would be forthcoming from the perpetrators. In the mean time, compensation of the victims will be financed from the tax-dollars of innocent Canadians, regardless of their religious affiliation, and not from the wealth of those responsible religious orders! _____
Canadian Residential Schools
Prime Minister Stephen Harper offered an historic apology to generations of aboriginals yesterday who were victims of a "sad chapter in our history." Speaking in an emotionally charged House of Commons, Harper expressed regret and remorse for the horrific legacy that began in the 1870s and continued for many generations. The government's "assimilation" policy ripped roughly 150,000 children from their homes and communities and placed them in far-away boarding schools. "The government now recognizes that the consequences of the Indian residential schools policy were profoundly negative and that this policy has had a lasting and damaging impact on aboriginal culture, heritage and language," Harper said in the Commons. Assembly of First Nations Chief Phil Fontaine brought many to tears when he called the apology "the achievement of the impossible."
"Finally we have heard Canada say it is sorry," he said. Fontaine said the apology officially strips away a policy of "white supremacy." The assimilation process impoverished not just the aboriginal population, but the character of our country as a whole. "We are, and always have been, an indispensable part of the Canadian identity," he said. HEAVY EMOTION Survivors and native leaders, many wearing colorful ceremonial dress, cheered, beat drums and unleashed tears of heavy emotion from the floor and upper galleries. The few permitted to address the House said they accepted the PM's words as sincere and expressed hope for a new beginning of healing and reconciliation. Marguerite Wabano, the eldest survivor at age 104, received a rousing standing ovation as she entered the room with a cane. Liberal Leader Stephane Dion acknowledged his party was in power for 70 years in the last century, and shared responsibility on behalf of the Liberals. "I am deeply sorry. I apologize," he said. "I am sorry that Canada willfully attempted to eradicate your identity and culture by taking you away from your families when you were children and by building a system to punish you for who you were." NDP Leader Jack Layton called the apology a "very important moment for Canada," as the government assumed responsibility for one of the most shameful eras of our history. But he insisted that concrete steps to improve the lives of aboriginals must follow this "crucial first step." "Even as we speak here today, thousands of aboriginal children are without schools, clean water, adequate food, their own bed, good health care, safety, comfort, land and rights," he said. "We can no longer throw up our hands and say there is nothing we can do."
Sun Media - Ottawa, June 11, 2008. Prime Minister Stephen Harper has apologized on behalf of all Canadians to generations of aboriginals who were victims of a "sad chapter in our history."
Speaking in an emotionally charged House of Commons, Harper expressed regret and remorse for a horrific legacy that began in the 1870s and continued for many generations. The government's assimilation policy ripped roughly 150,000 children from their homes and communities.
"The government now recognizes that the consequences of the Indian (First Nations) residential schools policy were profoundly negative and that this policy has had a lasting and damaging impact on aboriginal culture, heritage and language," Harper told the survivors, Parliamentarians and dignitaries assembled, many with tears.
While some former students have spoken positively about their experiences, those stories are overshadowed by tragic ones.
Deprived of the care of their families and native culture and language, many of the "helpless children" endured sexual, physical and emotional abuse, Harper said.
"Tragically, some of these children died while attending residential schools and others never returned home," he said.
June 11 (2008 - Reuters) Canada formally apologized on Wednesday for forcing aboriginal children into grim residential schools, where many say they were sexually and physically abused.
Here are some key facts about the residential schools and Canada's aboriginal population:
* Around 150,000 students attended the schools, which operated from the 1870s to the 1970s. The last school closed in 1996. There are currently around 87,000 survivors.
* In 1920, attendance became compulsory for all children aged 6 to 15. In 1931, at the peak of the residential school system, there were about 80 schools. In all, there were a total of about 130 schools run by the Anglican, Catholic, United and Presbyterian churches.
* The schools were meant to educate native children but became tools to assimilate the aboriginal population. Duncan Campbell Scott, a government bureaucrat, declared in 1920 that "I want to get rid of the Indian problem." He added: "Our objective is to continue until there is not a single Indian in Canada that has not been absorbed into the body politic."
* Ottawa agreed to a C$1.9 billion ($1.9 billion) settlement with school survivors in May 2006 that ended years of lawsuits. Survivors are eligible for C$10,000 for the first year they attended a residential school and C$3,000 for every year they were at a school after that.
* The settlement also agreed to establish a truth and reconciliation commission, which started work on June 1, 2008. It will spend the next five years traveling across Canada gathering testimony from survivors.
* There are currently around 1 million aboriginals in Canada out of a total population of 32 million. Many natives live in remote reserves where poverty, crime and suicide rates are much higher than the national average
* Ottawa currently spends around C$10 billion a year on the aboriginal population. ($1=$1.02 Canadian) (Reporting by David Ljunggren; editing by Rob Wilson) January 20 A TOUR OF THE GEORGIAN BAY TRIANGLE
presume that you have heard of, or even traveled to the Bermuda Triangle. Whether you had or not, I invite you to tour and enjoy the Georgian Triangle, dubbed as Ontario’s (Canada) best tourist playground, formed around the shores of Georgian Bay of the Great Lakes.
Whereas commercial interests are usually drawing the coordinates of the triangle, I would like to define them from a visitor’s perspective. I invite you to explore this magnificent part of our world as an outdoor enthusiast.
Collingwood is at the intersections of Highways #26 and #124, at the southernmost point of the Georgian Triangle. One could call it a base camp. From there, you can start to explore this beautiful part of Ontario by following the shores of Georgian Bay, both to the northeast and or to the north-west. As they say in Collingwood, Come for a day and stay for a week.
Heading north, along the eastern shore of Georgian Bay, through Wasaga Beach on River Road West, you reach the Penetang Harbor ferry dock at Cedar Point. From there you could sail across the open water to Christian Island. It is home to about 600 residents of the Beausoleil First Nation and a couple hundred of cottagers. After your visit to Christian Island and, you are back on the mainland and you will retrace your moves to Collingwood.
Collingwood caters to visitors with the Spring Trout Derby, the Elvis Festival, horse shows, cycling trails, golf courses, lovely beaches and parks, to mention only a few. Its hotels, motels, shops and restaurants will cater to your whims and wishes, year around. One of the many interesting shops to visit is the Blue Mountain Pottery.
Leaving Collingwood on Hwy 26 West, you will travel through Meaford and Owen Sound. From there, you continue north on Hwy. 6 to Tobermory, which is at the tip of the Bruce Peninsula. It is known to be the divers’ paradise, where experienced divers can explore the underwater treasures in the Fathom Five National Marine Conservation Area.
While in the area of Blue Mountains, you should not miss the Scenic Caves Nature Preserve. The Scenic Caves are the works of glacial ice that, over millions of years, carved them into the Niagara Escarpment, which stretches 725 kilometers, or 450 miles from Queenston on the Niagara River at the south end, to Tobermory at the north end.
Atop the precipice, you will have a breath-taking view of Collingwood, of southern Georgian Bay and of several thousand square kilometers of luscious, green rolling hills. The Scenic Caves, which are hundreds of feet deep, are easily accessible via fabricated metal stairs, where the descent would be dangerous otherwise.
At one point, the cave is so deep that winter’s ice and snow remain throughout the hot Ontario summers. It is perhaps for this phenomenon that the Huron Nation established here a village, called Ekarenniondi. The summer-surviving ice, nature’s refrigerator, helped them to preserve their meat and fish which they harvested before the onset of winter.
The Scenic Caves are also famous for their unusual vegetation, ranging from unique flowers, through a variety of mushrooms to the most admired Maidenhead Fern.
Your photographs or video recordings of the Scenic Caves’ unusual rock formations, one of which is the Huron’s’ Worshipping Rock, you will be proud to show to your friends and family for years to come. ♦♦♦ January 06 HOW TO NAVIGATE BETWEEN MODULES OF THIS BLOGBy clicking on the down arrow, next to the word
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(*) A képek megtekinthetők teljes képernyő méretben, ha a jobb oldalon látható ] Full view-ra kattintunk. Jó szórakozást! January 05 Young Offenders Act - CanadaThe YOUNG OFFENDERS ACT of CANADA Prepared by Philip Rosen, Senior Analyst Revised 25 January 2000.
Joe Warmington, a columnist with the Toronto Sun, entitled his January 4, 2008 column: Enough of this “hug-a-thug” approach.
It is not only his “trade-mark hat” that is on right; he seems to have his “head screwed on right” also. Yet I have to ask a few questions of him.
What took you so long to pen this well-written, hard-hitting article? No offence meant by the question!
Where were you when the formerly only mischievous youth were preparing to graduate to full-fledged criminals?
Was it your editor, who prevented you from expressing your views, that were and still are shared by your readers, the “silent majority” of the (once great) City of Toronto and Canada as a whole? Or, was it the “politically correct” group of bleeding hearts that dominate the political arena as of late?
Why is it that that an opposition politician is the only one who has the intestinal fortitude to proclaim that the (existing) law goes overboard to protect the young punks?
Enough of the questions, although there are hundreds, if not thousands that beg for answers. We, as the (still) free people of North America, have to squeeze a part of our “elected” politicians’ anatomy that will get their attention of the electorate’s will, even demands, to reclaim our country from the criminal elements imported from abroad lately.
At least, this is how I feel.
To do my bit as a concerned taxpayer, I sent a message to Mr. Warmington suggesting a possible solution to the youth crime and the existing “Young Offenders Act” as it is, which I expressed in my book, WALK 20 MILES IN MY MOCCASINS:
“If under-age offenders cannot be tried in adult court, not even for indictable offences, make their parents liable, to the full extent of the law, for their children’s action! If under-age bullies cannot be deterred, deter the parents.”
I have cast out the bait; will anyone have the political will to take it?
January 02 Mannerism vs Political Correctness
I would not be surprised if some of the readers of this posting would, at first, think that I am
a “sour grape,” which I am not. I am, however, of the “old school,” where social manners
were important. I still hold that opinion, even in these days of “political correctness.”
I have spent several years, toiling as a translator for the Federal Government of Canada.
Perhaps my acquired translation skills prompted me to include my translation of the
Hungarian National Anthem in my first book: PEACE, WAR AND THE AFTERMATH.
Having compared my translation with an “archaic,” earlier translation of the Anthem,
one of my critics suggested that it should be forwarded to the Hungarian Academy of
Sciences (MTA) for their consideration to make it the official English-language version
of the Anthem. That was back in 2005. As one of the proverbial old school graduates,
naively perhaps, I expected at least a “one-liner” acknowledgement from MTA. As I write,
it is the New Year of 2008 – yet, still no acknowledgement!
By now, I do not even expect a response from MTA. With my outmost respect to the
many fine academicians at MTA, there must also be a cadre there, which is the
“home-grown” new intellectuals, so carefully planned in the Rákosi-era, when the university
admission criteria was based on family background and not necessarily on academic
achievements!
Without further delay, here are some of the English-language translations of Ferenc
Kölcsey’s Himnusz - Hungary's national Anthem.
The National Anthem of Hungary
Isten, áldd meg a Magyart, Written by: Ferenc Kölcsey
Jó kedvvel, bőséggel,
Nyújts feléje védő kart,
Ha kűzd ellenséggel,
Balsors akit régen tép,
Hozz reá víg esztendőt,
Megbűnhődte már e nép
A múltat, s jövendőt.
Lord, bless the Hungarians Translated by: Sándor A. Erdélyi
with your joy and your plenty,
O my God, the Magyar bless Translated by: William N. Loew
I confess; such words as Thy, Thine, didst and hath
are missing from my vocabulary.
Then again, my name is not Shakespeare or Loew...
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