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Editorial: We raise our hands to 100 years of S岣祑x瘫w煤7mesh amalgamation

It was in the summer of 1923 that the chiefs and delegates of 16 villages across 6,732 square kilometres came together to unite as one First Nation
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The S岣祑x瘫w煤7mesh Welcome Figure at Ambleside Beach, now being restored by its original carver Stan Joseph. | Nick Laba / North Shore News

In Indigenous terms, 100 years is but a blip. But for the S岣祑x瘫wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation), the last century has been pivotal.

It was in the summer of 1923 that the chiefs and delegates of 16 villages across 6,732 square kilometres . They understood that, in a time when there was scant recognition of their rights and title by the Crown, their people would fare far better if they spoke with one voice.

Attempts by governments to dismantle their culture, disenfranchise their rights and dispossess their lands by no means ended in 1923, but there’s no question today the nation and its people had it not been for their amalgamation.

The nation is pursuing ambitious plans , both for economically. They are reviving the S岣祑x瘫wú7mesh Sníchim (Squamish Language) and investing in their own culture.

And they are sharing their knowledge with those who will listen. This summer, it is incumbent on members of the settler community who live comfortably on the Squamish people’s lands to educate themselves about this history and celebrate the nation’s progress. is a perfect opportunity to do just that. 

Outside the former St. Paul’s Indian Residential School in North Vancouver, a monument for the victims depicts Indigenous people in a canoe, ascending a wave. It’s symbolic of the trajectory Indigenous people have been on since colonization.

We raise our hands to the Squamish Nation as they mark 100 years of rising and prepare for the next 100.

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