Times Colonist

First Nation legislator makes history with speech in Oji-Cree

- LIAM CASEY and ALLISON JONES

— After decades of being told his first language should be forgotten, Sol Mamakwa stood on the floor of the Ontario legislatur­e about to make history.

But he couldn’t shake the thought that he should continue in English and not Anishinini­imowin, also called Oji-Cree, the language his mother taught him.

“I thought I was breaking the laws and the rules of this house and I tried to remind myself that there’s nothing wrong with this, ‘You’re allowed to speak,’ ” Mamakwa said.

And so he did.

In a moment that made history, the New Democrat — and the only First Nation legislator in the province — addressed Queen’s Park in his own language on Tuesday, marking the first time a language other than English and French has been allowed by officials in Ontario’s legislativ­e chamber.

In the process, the 53-yearold Mamakwa secured a pledge from the premier to build a longterm care home in Sioux Lookout, Ont.

“I want to say thank you to everyone present. I’m very grateful, thankful for the opportunit­y to be able to speak my Anishinini­imowin, in Indigenous Oji-Cree language in this legislatur­e,” Mamakwa said through an interprete­r at the start of his speech.

“I am speaking for those that couldn’t use our language and also for those people from Kiiwetinoo­ng, not only those from Kiiwetinoo­ng, but for every Indigenous person in Ontario.”

Ontario’s legislatur­e had not previously allowed interpreti­ng and transcribi­ng a language other than English and French.

About 100 supporters gathered in Toronto to watch the historic moment, including Mamakwa’s mother, siblings, friends and First Nation leaders. It was a gift to his mom, Kezia Mamakwa, who turned 79 on Tuesday.

Politician­s sang Happy Birthday to her and gave several standing ovations to Sol Mamakwa in an emotional question period.

“Today was monumental for me,” Mamakwa said afterward.

After his speech, Mamakwa took the lead questions during question period, grilling the government in his language about elder care in the north. He demanded to know if, or when, the government would follow through on its commitment to build 76 more beds at a nursing home in Sioux Lookout.

“I’m committing today in the public: we will be building those beds. We’ll be building a home in Sioux Lookout,” Premier Doug Ford said.

The premier said he was proud of Mamakwa, who sits directly across from Ford in the chamber.

“No one’s ever done this, what you’re doing today,” Ford said. “I just want to tell you how proud I am of you, how proud everyone here in the legislatur­e is, how proud everyone is in the First Nations.”

Mamakwa and Ford met in the middle of the room and hugged.

Over the past century, Indigenous languages across Canada have been dying. Government­s in the past, along with help from the Catholic and Protestant churches, ripped First Nation children from their homes and forced them to learn English in residentia­l and day schools. Children would be punished for speaking their own language. Mamakwa was no different. He spent two years as a teenager in a residentia­l school in northweste­rn Ontario. He and his friends would be punished if he spoke Anishinini­imowin. Sometimes it would be detention, other times it would be worse. Similar punishment would be doled out across the country at the residentia­l schools, the last of which shut down in 1996.

“Sometimes even soap was used to wash their mouth for speaking Anishinini­imowin, Oji-Cree language,” Mamakwa said through the chamber’s first interpreta­tion of an Indigenous language.

“They were given manual labour for speaking in their own language in residentia­l schools.”

Kezia Mamakwa looked on from the gallery as her son spoke in the language she taught him.

“She used to take me out into the wilderness, into the land, teaching me the language,” Sol Mamakwa said of his mom.

“She taught me and also other people — also the youth, the children, our grandchild­ren, our great grandchild­ren, they need to continue on in their First Nations language so that they can speak their own language.”

Mamakwa called on First Nations to save their languages while there are still older generation­s who speak it.

“Everyone that’s listening: we need to revitalize our First Nations language, teach your children to speak the First Nations language and to be proud of it.”

Mamakwa sparked the change at Queen’s Park after convincing Government House Leader Paul Calandra to allow him to speak at the legislatur­e in the language his parents taught him.

The legislator from Kingfisher Lake First Nation in northern Ontario has said the milestone is important because Indigenous people are losing their languages, and his speech and questions in the legislatur­e would mark a step toward reconcilia­tion.

Calandra changed the standing orders on languages spoken in the legislativ­e chamber to include any Indigenous language spoken in Canada.

The legislatur­e brought in interprete­rs to translate Mamakwa’s words in real time. Mamakwa’s words will also be represente­d in syllabics, an Indigenous writing system, in Hansard, the official record of proceeding­s at Queen’s Park.

Numerous First Nation leaders took in the historic moment.

“To hear your language being spoken in the most colonial institutio­n in this province is something that many of us never thought we would ever witness,” said Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler of Nishnawbe Aski Nation, which represents 49 First Nations in northweste­rn Ontario.

“It’s something that is long overdue.”

Neskantaga First Nation Chief Chris Moonias said the language change is very important to his people.

“All of us thought that would never happen, but we survived,” he said. “We survived through cultural genocide, we survived through mental health addictions, we survived residentia­l schools, we survived day schools.”

It was also an emotional day for Mamakwa’s family. Mamakwa honoured his later father, Jerry, who died in 2018.

Mamakwa’s brother, Jonathon Mamakwa, said his dad was with them in spirit.

“He always told us to do something,” he said, “and Sol just did something great.”

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? NDP MPP Sol Mamakwa, with an eagle feather directed toward the government benches, stands in the Ontario legislatur­e to speak in the Oji-Cree language, in Toronto on Tuesday.
CHRIS YOUNG, THE CANADIAN PRESS NDP MPP Sol Mamakwa, with an eagle feather directed toward the government benches, stands in the Ontario legislatur­e to speak in the Oji-Cree language, in Toronto on Tuesday.

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