Indigenous mural vandalized at Algonquin College - Action News
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Ottawa

Indigenous mural vandalized at Algonquin College

Ottawa police are investigating paint being smeared on a three-storey mural that nods to Indigenous stories of creation earlier this week.

Ottawa police's newly-reintroduced hate crime unit is investigating

An Indigenous mural at Algonquin College was smeared with paint Jan. 28, 2020. (Algonquin College)

Ottawa policehate crimeofficers are investigating paint being smeared on a three-storey mural that nods to Indigenous stories of creation at Algonquin College earlier this week.

The college says someone used yellow paint to defacepart of a three-storeymural at its WoodroffeAvenue campus at about 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, according to its security cameras.

"It was a targeted act of violence," said RonMcLester, vice president of truth, reconciliation, and indigenization at the college.

When he first learned of the vandalism he saidhe feltlike hewas going to throw up.

My stomach went queasy. I felt like I was going to throw up.- Ron (Deganadus) McLester, Algonquin College

The mural features a moose, a hawk anda giant turtle, a nod to a creation story told by some First Nations thatthe continentwas built on the back of a turtle.

Thetheme was conceived after consultation withlocal Algonquin and Mohawk elders, as well asstudents from various First Nations.

It was then commissioned and created byToronto-based large-scale mural artistsShalak Attack and Bruno Smoky, taking seven months and ending in the summer of 2018.

McLester said the night before the incident, the Indigenous Commons had been packed with students drumming and smudging.

"You could still smell the sweet grass, sage, tobacco and cedar [the next day]", said McLester, who believes the timing isn't a coincidence.

McLester, who is Iroquois and also goes by the traditional nameDeganadus, said despite the college's efforts and investment in creating welcoming Indigenous spacesthe vandalism shows there'sstill quite a bit of work to do.

The college has arranged for the artiststo return to campus in February to repair the damage. In the meantime, McLester wants the vandalism to remain visible.

"I want people to see it. I want people to know it happened here."

There will be college-wide "solidarity event" on campusnext week.

Ron McLester, who also goes by the traditional name Deganadus, is vice president of truth, reconciliation, and indigenization at the Algonquin College. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

New unit at work

Ottawa police reintroduced the hate crime unit last week after confusion about whether one ever existed in the first place.

Its two officers are also investigating an egg thrown at the National Holocaust Monument at the corner of Booth and Wellington streets at about 4 p.m. Wednesday.

A police spokesperson said nothing suggests the two incidents are linked.

Vandalism of Indigenous mural at Algonquin College sparks anger, hurt

5 years ago
Duration 1:00
Maggie Downer, Algonquin student, and Ron McLester, vice president of truth, reconciliation, and indigenization at the college, say the vandalism of the mural was a hurtful reminder of what still needs to be done to incorporate Indigenous identity at the school.