Review: For Nelson

First-hand accounts of horrific childhoods are rare in literature, and compelling: Charlie Chaplin’s My Autobiography, or A Memoir of Robert Blincoe, the recollections of an English workhouse boy that was so stark one U.K. reviewer said it made Oliver Twist look like a holiday camp. From Athabasca University Press is My Decade at Old Sun, My Lifetime of Hell, the memoirs of an Indian Residential schoolboy. Arthur Bear Chief’s story is so raw it would have gone unpublished 30 years ago. Bear Chief notes with irony the Anglican Church didn’t give him much of an education at the Old Sun Residential School in Gleichen, Alta. His English skills were so poor that later, as a public servant, he had an ex-wife ghostwrite his government reports. The result in My Decade at Old Sun is a plain and riveting narrative stripped of adjectives and ornamental prose. It is vivid and powerful. READ MORE

Agonized Over Gay Marriage

Newly-declassified 2004 cabinet minutes show then-Prime Minister Paul Martin agonized over legalization of same-sex marriage. Martin privately complained provincial courts had forced the government’s hand, according to Access To Information records disclosed yesterday: "Many Canadians are struggling with the idea." READ MORE

Alleged Graves ‘Confidential’

The Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations has censored as "confidential" its files on what a Kamloops, B.C. First Nation did with $12.1 million paid to recover alleged graves of Indian Residential School children. The Tk’emlups te Secwepemc First Nation acknowledged February 18 it never exhumed any remains: "The heartbreaking truth about Residential Schools’ unmarked burials continues to be unveiled." READ MORE

A.I. Layoffs Are Here: Union

Layoffs due to artificial intelligence are already underway, says one of the country’s largest unions. The Canadian Union of Public Employees in a report to senators itemized jobs that have vanished: "CUPE is already seeing job loss." READ MORE

$30K For Workplace Needling

The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal has awarded an Alberta truck driver $30,000 in damages for discrimination. The Tribunal was told the driver was harassed at work after suffering an injury on the job: "Damage awards should not be so trivial or insignificant so as to be meaningless." READ MORE

A Footnote To Blue Jays Fever

A national radio ombudsman yesterday faulted a Toronto station for celebrating World Series ticket giveaways. Radio CFTR should have specified it had the same ownership as the Blue Jays, Rogers Inc., ruled the Canada Broadcast Standards Council: "The media landscape has changed with corporate groups becoming increasingly involved in many ventures." READ MORE

Feds Made Patriotic Loophole

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Buy Canadian policy doesn’t apply to Crown corporations hiring suppliers outside the country, says a federal memo. The Prime Minister omitted the fact when urging Canadians to support home industries: "Canada is on a mission to build Canada strong." READ MORE

Guest Commentary

Jenny Kwan, MP

The Fortune God

As kids, we told the legend of Nian, a ferocious beast that came to steal children. We lit firecrackers and hung Chinese red paper couplet decorations to ward off the Nian. That’s how we would bring in the new year with a fresh start. It makes me nostalgic. My parents were born in the mainland province of Guangdong and moved to Hong Kong. I was born in Kowloon in 1965, the youngest of six children. For Chinese, new year is as big as Christmas.