Metis veterans get long-awaited recognition ahead of Remembrance Day
OTTAWA — A fiddle played the sombre strains of the Last Post and Amazing Grace during a special ceremony Friday to remember the contributions of Canada’s Metis people during the Second World War as well as the discrimination that greeted them upon their return home.
The ceremony followed a formal apology and a promise of compensation from the federal government in September that acknowledged Metis veterans were not allowed to receive the same benefits and reintegration support as other Canadians after the war.
The issue remained a sore point for the Metis community for decades, particularly after the government issued an apology and compensation to First Nations’ veterans for similar discrimination in 2002.
Speaking to the small gathering of veterans, family members and supporters who gathered around the National Indigenous War Memorial for Friday’s ceremony, David Chartrand of the Metis National Council thanked the Liberal government for the apology and compensation.