Yukon celebrates 50th anniversary of watershed self-governance meeting
WHITEHORSE — For Peter Johnston, Grand Chief of the Council of Yukon First Nations, the history of the territory’s modern self-government agreements runs in his blood.
On Feb. 14, 1973, his father — Sam Johnston, former chief of the Teslin Tlingit Council — was part of a delegation of Yukon First Nations leaders who flew to Ottawa to present then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau with a document laying out both grievances and a proposed plan to for the future.
Five decades later, it was Prime Minister Justin Trudeau who flew across the country, coming to Whitehorse as part of a weeklong celebration marking the anniversary of the historic meeting.
The document, titled Together Today for Our Children Tomorrow, launched decades of negotiations that culminated in the territory’s Umbrella Final Agreement in 1993, a landmark moment in Canadian Indigenous rights, and individual self-government agreements for First Nations.