Bank Of Montreal replaces plaques commemorating killing of Iroquois chief
MONTREAL — After years of criticism from the Indigenous community, BMO has removed two stone plaques from the facade of a building in Montreal’s tourist sector that commemorated the killing of an Iroquois chief in 1644.
The plaques, one in English and the other in French, told the tale of the founder of Montreal, Paul de Chomedey, sieur de Maisonneuve, who killed the chief “with his own hands. March 1644.”
Calls to take down the stones grew last year as people across the country began debating what to do with statues and other historic markers that were deemed offensive to native peoples.
On Tuesday, workers had removed the offending plaques and were readying to replace them with new stones whose message excluded the line about Maisonneuve’s busy hands.