War Book burning at Ontario francophone schools as 'gesture of reconciliation' denounced

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A book burning held by an Ontario francophone school board as an act of reconciliation with Indigenous people has received sharp condemnation from Canadian political leaders and the board itself now says it regrets its symbolic gesture.

The “flame purification” ceremony, first reported by Radio Canada, was held in 2019 by the Conseil scolaire catholique Providence, which oversees elementary and secondary schools in southwestern Ontario. Some 30 books, the national broadcaster reported, were burned for “educational purposes” and then the ashes were used as fertilizer to plant a tree.

“We bury the ashes of racism, discrimination and stereotypes in the hope that we will grow up in an inclusive country where all can live in prosperity and security,” says a video prepared for students about the book burning, Radio Canada reported.

In total, more than 4,700 books were removed from library shelves at 30 schools across the school board, and they have since been destroyed or are in the process of being recycled, Radio Canada reported.

Lyne Cossette, the board’s spokesperson, told National Post that the board formed a committee and “many Aboriginal knowledge keepers and elders participated and were consulted at various stages, from the conceptualization to the evaluation of the books, to the tree planting initiative.”

“Symbolically, some books were used as fertilizer,” Cossette wrote in an email.

The project, entitled Redonnons à la terre — “give back to the earth,” in English — was intended “to make a gesture of openness and reconciliation by replacing books in our libraries that had outdated content and carried negative stereotypes about First Nations, Métis and Inuit people.”

The school library, she said, is constantly updated, and the library books on shelves have “positive and inclusive messages about the diverse communities within our schools.”

“We regret that we did not intervene to ensure a more appropriate plan for the commemorative ceremony and that it was offensive to some members of the community. We sincerely regret the negative impact of this initiative intended as a gesture of reconciliation,” Cossette wrote.

Asked about the book burning, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said it’s not up to non-Indigenous people “to tell Indigenous people how they should feel or act to advance reconciliation.”

“On a personal level, I would never agree to the burning of books,” Trudeau said.

Yves-François Blanchet, leader of the Bloc Québécois, said “we don’t burn books,” at a press conference.

“We expose ourselves to history, we explain it, we demonstrate how society has evolved or must evolve,” he said.

Asked about the report, Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole said, “Reconciliation is important for all Canadians and we have to have a system that does not discriminate.”

Later, O’Toole tweeted: “A Conservative government will be committed to reconciliation. But the road to reconciliation does not mean tearing down Canada. I strongly condemn the burning of books.”

Jagmeet Singh, the NDP leader, said the news calls for reflection.

“I have seen negative images, cartoons, and presentation that do not respect the dignity of Indigenous communities. So I think we really need to change our approach to teaching our children,” Singh said.

A 165-page school board document includes analysis of all the books removed from shelves, Radio Canada reported.

Among them are classic titles, such as Tintin in America, which was withdrawn for its “negative portrayal of indigenous peoples and offending Aboriginal representation in the drawings.”

Also removed were books that allegedly contain cultural appropriation, as well as outdated history books, such as two biographies of Jacques Cartier, a French explorer who mapped the St. Lawrence, and another of explorer Étienne Brûlé.

André Noël, a Quebec journalist, noted on Twitter that his book, Trafic chez les Hurons, published in 2000, was among those removed from shelves. In a Twitter thread, Noël wrote in French that the removal of his book “surprises me and seems excessive.”

“But I fear that this controversy will distract us from the real scandal, which we have not yet fully measured: the destruction of Indigenous lands and the oppression of Indigenous peoples by Europeans and their descendants, including in Canada and in Quebec,” he wrote.

Who didn't see this coming?

After all those years in school about how bad book burnings were, they go and do this.
 
Among them are classic titles, such as Tintin in America, which was withdrawn for its “negative portrayal of indigenous peoples and offending Aboriginal representation in the drawings.”
What right do the 'indigenous' (they're Central Asians, but whatever) have to NOT be offended?

What is this new racial lese majeste and how does it work?

In total, more than 4,700 books were removed from library shelves at 30 schools across the school board, and they have since been destroyed or are in the process of being recycled, Radio Canada reported.
And these are the people who imagine that they are the 'good guys.'

Never let the Progressives tell you they are opposed to tyranny or fascism. Their only objection to any of the Wacky Germans' little trip to the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft is that the Progressives didn't get to pick the kindling.

Asked about the book burning, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said it’s not up to non-Indigenous people “to tell Indigenous people how they should feel or act to advance reconciliation.”
As the the Prime Minister of all of Canada, you have a duty to tell this small, discrete and insular minority of people who are okay with destroying parts of your literary canon and history, to get the fuck over it.
 
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The “flame purification” ceremony, first reported by Radio Canada, was held in 2019 by the Conseil scolaire catholique Providence, which oversees elementary and secondary schools in southwestern Ontario. Some 30 books, the national broadcaster reported, were burned for “educational purposes” and then the ashes were used as fertilizer to plant a tree.
It's a foregone conclusion that they'll eventually burn down the "racist tree", right?
 
Well if book burning is okay, I guess Boss uniforms and national socialism will be next. I hope everyone brushed up on the goose step!
„Das Zeitalter eines überspitzten jüdischen Intellektualismus ist zu Ende gegangen, und die deutsche Revolution hat dem deutschen Wesen wieder die Gasse freigemacht. Diese Revolution kam nicht von oben, sie ist von unten hervorgebrochen. Sie ist deshalb im besten Sinne des Wortes der Vollzug des Volkswillens."
 
I got excited when I read the title because I thought the leaf francophones were fucking with the leaf anglophones again, and demanding independence. That made Canada so fucking mad haha.
 
The more im reminded we are the same we were 1000 years ago, we just have fancy clothes and devices now. But the apeshitness is the same.

We had a bit of a hope spot in the 90's and 2000's though. Sure there were a few Harry Potter burnings and what-not, but at least the people who did those were mocked by the general public and it really seemed like we were getting our shit sorted out. Guess not...

Ah well, it's depressing, but serves us right for getting our hopes up I guess.
 
We had a bit of a hope spot in the 90's and 2000's though. Sure there were a few Harry Potter burnings and what-not, but at least the people who did those were mocked by the general public and it really seemed like we were getting our shit sorted out. Guess not...

Ah well, it's depressing, but serves us right for getting our hopes up I guess.


Humanity will always remember to shoot itself in the gut just so it can spite itself. It cyclical, entire empires fell because we are just that darn well at never learning shit.
 
The more im reminded we are the same we were 1000 years ago, we just have fancy clothes and devices now. But the apeshitness is the same.
To people who complain that the world is going to shit, I try to point out that the world has always been going to shit.
Perpetually. Since the dawn of time.

We have long ago achieved shit-orbit, forever falling to shit but never quite hitting the shit-planet that we're circling around. As demonstrated here:
We had a bit of a hope spot in the 90's and 2000's though. Sure there were a few Harry Potter burnings and what-not, but at least the people who did those were mocked by the general public and it really seemed like we were getting our shit sorted out.
humans can sometimes achieve aposhit, or the furthest point in our orbit from shit. We're quickly approaching a perishit, or closest point in orbit to the shit that we're perpetually falling towards.

It's all very Scientific™.
 
“We expose ourselves to history, we explain it, we demonstrate how society has evolved or must evolve,” he said.
THIS!

This is what should be done. You keep the material, but make sure to give it context of the period from when it as made. Explain why it is problematic, and how things have changed/need to change. Getting rid of it does no one any good. It is infinitely more difficult to learn about and from something when it is just an abstract concept. But you let people see the material, it is much easier to explain. You tell someone that something was bad, they'll go "Meh." You show someone something and let them see it for themselves, in its original form, that makes an impact because seeing it makes it real.
 
All books are history, even the mediocre romance novels from the 70s and the crappy James Bond knockoffs with racially insensitive villains. (I once came across such a book where the Chinese antagonist was described as "yellow")

When those are thrown away, you throw away the thoughts, attitudes and ideas of the period. They're thoughts you don't like? Tough. Still history.
 
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