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Acadians celebrate Ottawa's approval
of expulsion proclamation By CHRIS MORRIS -- Canadian Press FREDERICTON (CP) - Acadians in the Maritimes are celebrating a decision by the federal government to endorse a royal proclamation acknowledging the wrongs done to their ancestors during the expulsions of the 18th century. Euclide Chiasson, head of the Societe Nationale des Acadiens, said Wednesday the proclamation was approved by the federal cabinet during what was expected to be its final meeting with Prime Minister Jean Chretien earlier this week. "It was, to use the Latin phrase, 'in extremis,' because it was the last cabinet meeting," Chiasson said in an interview. "Up to the last minute, we didn't know if it would make the agenda. We have to thank (MPs) Sheila Copps and Stephane Dion who took leadership on this and pushed it through. We are very happy." The Acadian society wrote Queen Elizabeth several months ago asking the Crown to consider an acknowledgment of the expulsions, which began in 1755 and ended around 1763. Earlier efforts to seek a royal apology were dropped. Buckingham Palace responded by saying the Queen would need the advice of her Canadian ministers. "The proposal was put to the cabinet and we understand it was accepted unanimously," Chiasson said. He said the proclamation will be signed next week by Gov. Gen. Adrienne Clarkson. He said that in addition to acknowledging the expulsions as part of Canadian history, there also will be a special commemorative day - July 28. "We finally have a document that recognizes the events
surrounding that very sad part of our history," Chiasson
said. "That, to me, is important. People are always revising
history and undermining certain events. The fact that it is
now recognized in this proclamation makes it a reality." The British Crown has made several mea culpas in recent years, including to the Maori people of New Zealand who lost vast tracts of territory to land-hungry settlers over 130 years ago. It has also issued apologies relating to the Boer war, the Irish potato famine and for Britian's role in the 1938 appeasement of Nazi Germany that led to the end of democracy in the Czech Republic, then part of Czechoslovakia. As well, the British government recently offered "sincere regrets" for its home-children policy under which about 100,000 children, classed as orphans, were shipped from England to Canada between 1867 and 1939. Chiasson's ancestors hid during the deportation, finally
settling in Cheticamp, N.S., when the expulsion ended in the
mid-1760s with a peace treaty between France and Britain. He
said lingering pain from being an unwanted and expelled
people haunts Acadians to this day. He said their history
has made the Acadian people who they are today and he
believes their contribution, and suffering, needs to be
recognized."It's not a question of looking back," Chiasson
said. "It's a question of looking forward and knowing who
you are."
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