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Garibaldi never set foot here. Why is a park still named after him?

It鈥檚 the 100th anniversary of the Garibaldi Park Reserve. The Squamish Nation know the mountain as Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛, a place of refuge during the Great Flood.

The Creator wasn鈥檛 happy.

He had blessed the Skwxw煤7mesh with an abundance of natural resources and beauty, and yet they were forgetting the teachings of their medicine people and spiritual leaders.

Despite repeated warnings, the people now known as Squamish Nation continued to disrespect the land and each other.

And so the Great Flood came.

Seeking escape, the Skwxw煤7mesh loaded their families and supplies into canoes. Many perished as the land beneath them was swallowed up by water. Those who survived were able to tie their canoes to the top of Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛, the tallest mountain in their territory, until the waters receded. Chastened, the Skwxw煤7mesh returned to their settlements with a newfound commitment to follow the Creator鈥檚 ways. They would be wise stewards of the land.

Fast forward thousands of years to 1860. The British Navy sent a survey team to the coast that, seven decades earlier, Captain George Vancouver had meticulously mapped out. The captain of the survey ship was George Henry Richards. As he sailed up the Howe Sound, he couldn鈥檛 help but be impressed by the snow-capped volcanic peak of the highest mountain in the Coastal Mountain range.

Giuseppe Garibaldi
Giuseppe Garibaldi is credited with uniting Sicily and Naples with what is now modern-day Italy. He has no ties to British Columbia, let alone the mountain that bears his name. - Getty Museum

For reasons lost in the mists of time, Cpt. Richards was also deeply impressed by the recent exploits of an Italian 鈥渇reedom fighter鈥 named Giuseppe Garibaldi. According to Encyclopedia Britannica, 鈥渁 republican who, through his conquest of Sicily and Naples with his guerrilla Redshirts, contributed to the achievement of Italian unification under the royal House of Savoy.鈥

Firing his ship鈥檚 guns, Cpt. Richards christened the mountain in honour of a man who had never done anything even remotely connected to this land.

In another leap of time, it鈥檚 the early 1900s.

1910 map of Garibaldi
This 1910-1912 sketch of the Garibaldi reserve area was part of Kate Bell鈥檚 1984 history of the provincial park.

The mountain and its bountiful valleys had long been popular with trappers and prospectors. Mountaineers saw it as their Mount Everest. The first recorded ascent was achieved in 1907 by a group of six men who were instrumental in founding the British Columbia Mountaineering Club that same year.

Adventurous souls built a few rudimentary cabins and organized summer camps.

鈥淚n 1913, W. Gray and P. Long went in ahead of the camp to blaze a trail for pack horses,鈥 writes Kate Bell in her detailed 1984 paper called the , Black Tusk and Diamond Head. 鈥淣ow that access into the meadows [above Stony Creek at elevation of more than 3,000 feet] was much improved with a pack horse route, the climbers sought ways to cross Garibaldi Lake, although boating did not originally start out as recreational pursuit but rather a fast and convenient means of getting to Sentinel Bay.鈥

The Alpine Club of Canada soon added its voice to calls to protect such 鈥済reat natural beauty鈥 for the growing populations of Vancouver and Victoria.

1917 Alpine Club letter Garibaldi Park Reserve
In 1917, the Alpine Club of Canada wrote a letter to the 小蓝视频 premier in support of the creation of the Garibaldi Park Reserve. The decree was signed in 1920 and the reserve became a full-fledged provincial park seven years later. - 小蓝视频 Parks

In 1917, it wrote to Premier H.C. Brewster: 鈥淎reas such as this, where the beauties of British Columbia mountain scenery are so exceptionally well displayed, when made easily accessible and properly advertised, become a useful asset and draw many visitors from various parts of the world, thereby providing considerable revenue through the monies spent visiting them.鈥

Besides, the letter adds, 鈥渋t may be said that, owing to its high altitude and mountainous character, it is not likely that there are at present outside individual interests that would be affected by the creation of such a scenic reserve.鈥

The province created the Garibaldi Park Reserve in April 1920. Seven years later it enhanced the status to the 195,000-hectare provincial park that, as the Alpine Club predicted, attracts thousands of outdoor enthusiasts and Instagram adventure seekers to one of the most photographed places in British Columbia.

Today, on the 100th anniversary of the park reserve鈥檚 creation, a pandemic has tossed life upside down for people around the world. It鈥檚 coinciding with a time of cultural upheaval. The Black Lives Matter and Idle No More movements have sparked soulful conversations about the need for a more .

So, is it time to change the name of Mt. Garibaldi to the culturally and historically more appropriate Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛?

(Listen to the Squamish pronunciation of Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛 . This video explains

When you restore Indigenous names, it creates an opportunity for the Squamish people to start telling their stories, says Chris Lewis (Syeta'xtn), a councillor and spokesperson for Squamish Nation.

Noting how road signs along the Sea to Sky corridor now include Indigenous names, he says that by exposing people to how the land was first called, you prompt people to start asking questions. Those questions lead to deeper understandings of First Nations peoples both past and present.

鈥淓verything we do as Skwxw煤7mesh is based in place,鈥 Lewis says. 鈥淥ur ancestral names come from a place, our songs, our spiritual aspects. They tell people what has occurred here or what the place was used for.鈥

When those names become more broadly used, 鈥渙ur history becomes everyone鈥檚 history.鈥

Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛 mountain gets its name from the river that flows along it. At first blush, its meaning seems incongruous for a mountain of such significance: dirty place or grimy place.

Dirty?

鈥淚f you go to the main streams that flow off of the mountain, they are just choked with volcanic debris 鈥 fine mud,鈥 explains retired geologist Bob Turner. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 drink that water and it鈥檚 because the volcanic rock that makes up the mountain are weak and unstable.

鈥淓ven in the summer when the winds blow, you can get those dust storms that pick up the volcanic dust from the upper mountain slopes. The name Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛 is just so appropriate.鈥

That volcanic rock was also a main source of trade for the Squamish people. Obsidian is a naturally occurring volcanic glass found where molten materials flowed down like a river from the peak. When fractured, obsidian has hard, sharp edges that can be turned into coveted tools.

鈥淲hen you have a resource like that it creates wealth and knowledge,鈥 Lewis says of obsidian鈥檚 early value. 鈥淭hrough new archeological technology that finds the DNA of the obsidian artifacts, we can trace obsidian from Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛 far into the Interior of British Columbia and all down the coast to Portland.鈥

Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛 also looms large in Squamish culture as a place of spiritual training. 鈥淥ur people would go up into the alpine and sub-alpine terrain and isolate themselves as they tried to figure out who they would want to become,鈥 he says.

Lewis notes that in a modern-day context, the Squamish Nation鈥檚 economic development corporation is called Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛. 鈥淚t represents the highest mountain in our homelands so that we strive for that greatness and specialness. But it also reminds us that, dating back to the story of the great flood, that we always have to stick to our cultural ways and our teachings because when we stray from that, that鈥檚 when bad things happen.

鈥淚t reminds us of our connection to the natural and spiritual world and how we should conduct ourselves as Skwxw煤7mesh people in everyday life and on the land.鈥

While the Squamish Nation has not made a formal request to the province to change the name, Lewis says they appreciate that there鈥檚 now a growing social and political licence to restart the conversation.

David Karn is a spokesperson for the 小蓝视频 Ministry of Environment. 鈥溞±妒悠 Parks,鈥 he writes, 鈥渉as a Collaborative Management Agreement with Squamish Nation. We work together on many initiatives in parks and protected areas within the traditional territory of Squamish Nation. We have discussed name-changing initiatives with Squamish Nation and hope to work with them in the near future on such initiatives.鈥

Just as nearly every culture has its great flood story, Lewis believes there鈥檚 value in having the name Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛 serve as a cautionary tale for everyone: beware of treating the natural world unwisely.

鈥淥ur story of Nch鈥檏瘫ay虛 is about losing our way,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e weren鈥檛 listening to our elders and our teachings. As a result, the Creator brought the waters as a reminder of the gifts that were given to us by the Creator.鈥

Martha Perkins is the North Shore News鈥 Indigenous and civic affairs reporter. This reporting beat is made possible by the Local Journalism Initiative.

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