Chiefs honour Indigenous leader wrongfully hanged in B.C. 154 years ago
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Chiefs who gathered in New Westminster, B.C., to commemorate an Indigenous leader’s wrongful trial and execution 154 years ago say they see signs of reconciliation from the federal government but their struggle for recognition continues in the courts.
Chief Ahan was hanged in the city’s downtown on July 18, 1865, and a ceremony memorializing his exoneration was held on Thursday at a high school where the Tsilhqot’in Nation believes its ancestor could have been reburied after his remains were transferred from the courthouse square decades ago.
Members of the Tsilhqot’in have gathered in New Westminster every year since Ahan was killed but Thursday’s event was hosted for the first by the City of New Westminster.
Chief Joe Alphonse, tribal chair of the Tsilhqot’in National Government, said that gesture is part of the partnership the nation is building with the city, which removed a statue earlier this month of Judge Matthew Begbie.