Batoche Historic Site lands to be transferred back to Mtis people of Saskatchewan - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:46 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Batoche Historic Site lands to be transferred back to Mtis people of Saskatchewan

Portions of Batoche, a national historic site in Saskatchewan near and dear to Mtis people's hearts, will be transferred back to Mtis control.

690 hectares of land at Batoche to be returned to Mtis people: federal government

Dignitaries from the Mtis Nation-Saskatchewan, the federal government and the provincial government were on hand to sign an agreement to transfer 690 hectares of land from the western part of Batoche back to Mtis people of Saskatchewan. (Trever Bothorel/CBC News)

Land at the Batoche National Historic Site, an area significant and close to Mtis people's hearts in Saskatchewan, will be transferred back to Mtis control, the federal government announcedFriday.

A federal news release said the transfer will include 690 hectares of land at Batoche, located 78 kilometres north of Saskatoon.

No fixed date for the transfer has yet been announced.

"The Batoche grounds have always been important to our Mtis citizens, our history and the resistance," Mtis Nation-Saskatchewan president Glen McCallum said in a news release.

"The repatriation of Batoche lands is tangible and starts the path to reconciliation."

McCallum said Mtis people will determine what the best use of the repatriated lands is and that their ancestors'ultimate sacrifices will be honoured.

The Mtis Nation-Saskatchewan willspecifically be responsible for lands on the western part of the National Historic Site.

McCallum said discussions to take over more land at Batochestarted roughly five years ago and he's pleased with how quickly they progressed.

"It's been really aggressive conversations around land and the government has been very [co-operative] and accommodating," he said after Friday's announcement.

"Five years, it's not a long time."

Batoche was founded in 1872 by Xavier Letendre, a Mtis merchant who established a ferry service on the banks of the South Saskatchewan River at a village he nicknamed Batoche.

Batoche was where, inMay 1885, Louis Riel, Gabriel Dumont and a Mtis provisional government made their last stand againstarmed federal government forces. They were overrun by federal forces, effectively ending the 1885 Northwest Resistance. The last engagement of the resistance came a few weeks later, with a battle at Steele Narrows in Saskatchewan.

"These lands hold deep cultural, spiritual and historic significance for the citizens of the Mtis Nation-Saskatchewan," the federal government's statement said.

"Parks Canada has long worked with Mtis at Batoche National Historic Site, and this transfer of land and commitment to collaborative management marks a significant step in the ongoing relationship"

In 1996 the federal government transferred the Back to Batoche festival grounds to Mtis ownership. That land is now managed by the Mtis Nation-Saskatchewan. In 1998 Parks Canada and the Mtis Nation-Saskatchewn entered into a shared management partnership agreement to maintain the historic site.

Minister of Northern Affairs and Prairies Economic Development Canada DanVandal said Parks Canada will continue to hold up its end of the shared management partnership agreement, while acting under the guidance of the Mtis people.

Vandal and Minister of Environment and Climate Change Canada and Parks Canada Steven Guilbeault, as well as representatives from the provincial government, attended the 50th annual Back to Batoche event Friday at the national historic site, where the announcement was made.

Vandal, a Red RiverMtis man and the MP for the Winnipeg riding to Saint Boniface-Saint Vital an area with strong ties to Mtis historycalled the trek to Batoche a pilgrimage and said he was happy to be at the historic site for Friday's announcement.

"A lot of my ancestors they fought at Batoche, they were part of that historical resistance against the Canadian government," Vandal said.

"Today, as a minister with the Canadian government, of course our values have changed tremendously over those 137 years, we've realized there's a great opportunity to make amends, to move ahead in partnership."

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story indicated that the Battle of Batoche marked the end of the Northwest Resistance. In fact, the last engagement of the resistance came a few weeks later, with a battle at Steele Narrows.
    Jul 23, 2022 8:38 AM CT