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Winner of The Nora and Ted Sterling Prize in Support of
Controversy, Simon Fraser University Originally approved as a
master of laws thesis by a respected Canadian university, this book
tackles one of the most compelling issues of our time--the crime of
genocide--and whether in fact it can be said to have occurred in
relation to the many Original Nations on Great Turtle Island now
claimed by a state called Canada. It has been hailed as
groundbreaking by many Indigenous and other scholars engaged with
this issue, impacting not just Canada but states worldwide where
entrapped Indigenous nations face absorption by a dominating
colonial state.Starblanket unpacks Canada's role in the removal of
cultural genocide from the Genocide Convention, though the
disappearance of an Original Nation by forced assimilation was
regarded by many states as equally genocidal as destruction by
slaughter. Did Canada seek to tailor the definition of genocide to
escape its own crimes which were then even ongoing? The crime of
genocide, to be held as such under current international law, must
address the complicated issue of mens rea (not just the commission
of a crime, but the specific intent to do so). This book permits
readers to make a judgment on whether or not this was the
case.Starblanket examines how genocide was operationalized in
Canada, focused primarily on breaking the intergenerational
transmission of culture from parents to children. Seeking to absorb
the new generations into a different cultural
identity--English-speaking, Christian, Anglo-Saxon, termed
Canadian--Canada seized children from their parents, and oversaw
and enforced the stripping of their cultural beliefs, languages and
traditions, replacing them by those still in process of being
established by the emerging Canadian state. She outlines the array
and extent of the destruction which inevitably took place as part
of the effort to bring about such a wrenching change--forcible
indoctrination by means of massive and widespread death by disease
and dilapidated living conditions, torture, forced starvation,
labor, and sexual predation--collateral damage to Canada's effort
to absorb diverse original nations into one larger, alien and
dominating body politic. The cumulative effects of genocide
continue to be exhibited by the survivors and their descendants who
suffer from the trauma and dysfunction, primarily in healthy proper
parenting, which results in ongoing forcible removals via the child
welfare systems to this day.
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