Space for Algonquin Peoples to open near Parliament, but no date set
OTTAWA — Algonquin leaders and the federal government have signed an agreement committing to a new space for Algonquin Peoples in Ottawa’s parliamentary precinct, five years after the former grand chief staged a hunger and hydration strike in protest.
Verna Polson, who previously served as the grand chief of the Algonquin Anishinabeg Nation Tribal Council, refused both food and water as she camped out in front of the Indigenous Peoples building in Ottawa in July 2019. She was criticizing the federal government for not including space for her nation in the building designated for three national Indigenous organizations — the Assembly of First Nations, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami and the Métis National Council.
She, and others who supported the cause, argued that as the building — and Ottawa at large — sits on top of her nation’s unceded traditional territory, it only made sense they be included.
On Wednesday, an agreement borne out of her protest and advocacy for a space to be built beside the Indigenous Peoples building was formally signed.