2012年2月8日水曜日

How Citizenship Understood By People At Large

how citizenship understood by people at large

Re-imagining History- The Sacrifice of Truth for Propaganda

By John Bacher

A recent cartoon published in The St. Catharines Standard – a newspaper which is now part of the Conservative Party leaning Sun Media empire – portrayed soldiers standing on guard during the War of 1812. They were instructed by their commander to stand firm, since if the Americans succeeded in winning, Canada would be turned into a National Park.

American troops stand firm during War of 1812 battle.

Following his encounter with the Native Americans of the plains, Catlin wrote the words which still resonate with Canadians who, in these dark times that try the soul, still dare to identify themselves as environmentalists. He urged that some great protecting policy of government serve to preserve its pristine beauty and wildness (as) a magnificent park. Such a A Nations Park, for Catlin would allow the world to see for ages to come, the native Indians in classic attire, galloping his wild horse, with sinewy bow, and shield and lance, amid the fleeting herds of elk and buffaloes.

Following Catlins 1832 vision, many years went by before diluted variants of his vision gained significant popular support. It was not until June 30, 1864 that American President Abraham Lincoln signed the law that protected the Yosemite Valley as a park. Here however, park protection was quite poor as the park was administered initially by the State of California.


The evolution of anything recognizable as a U.S. National Park system was a slow struggle. It was not until 1890 that effective protection was obtained from the domestic livestock whose grazing threatened to kill young trees in Yosemite, through legislation championed by pioneer American environmentalist John Muir. The federal law had the U.S. Army patrol the park as had previously been done in Yellowstone National Park, created in 1871.

What makes Sun Medias sacrifice of historical truth to the gods of corporate profits so offensive is that much of the opposition to the American expansion in the War of 1812 came from efforts by native people to achieve a beautiful goal that approximated Catlins dream. While these natives did not use the term national park, what they were calling for sought the same purpose. This was continued control over widespread areas of land for the continuation of their way of life based on extensive herds of elk and buffalo.

British troops torch Washington during War of 1812

While he did not use the term national park, the architect of native resistance to American invasion in the War of 1812 had a term of similar power for its time. This was the concept of Indiana, an Indian buffer state between the United States and Upper Canada. Indiana was the vision of the great native chief Tecumseh. He was acutely aware of the consequences of American expansionism on the environment, noting that it promoted deforestation and subsequent soil erosion which polluted water. Tecumseh sought the establishment of Indiana under native governance which would remove American expansionists from native lands in the states of Michigan, Illinois and Ohio.


By provoking the Americans to declare war on Great Britain in 1812, Tecumseh won what appeared to be a partial victory. Through war he sought to bring down the weight of a great power upon the United States to achieve the realization of Indiana. Although Tecumseh died in battle in 1813, the defeat of Napoleon in 1814 gave some hope to his cause. For the last six months of the war the issue of Indiana was the only point at which American and British diplomats could not agree upon. This resulted in some of the fiercest battles of the war, including the burning of Washington. D.C. by British troops.

Rather than showing Canadian red coats fighting against the threat of a National Park, a more accurate image would have been to illustrate how the fear of Indiana motivated American forces. This is what would have prompted the call for American troops to hold the line following the burning of Washington and during the British attack on Baltimore. The danger was well understood by Francis Scott Key. Following the celebration of the American victory in Baltimore, he composed Americas national anthem, The Star Spangled Banner, and went on to become the U.S. attorney that battled in court to expel the Cherokee Indians onto the Trail of Tears.

Although being branded as traitors by the Conservative spin doctors and cartoonists, Canadians who oppose the construction of the 731-mile-long Northern Gateway Pipeline are continuing the heroic tradition that motivated resistance to the American invasion in the War of 1812. Native nations such as the Gitgaat living along the coast of British Columbia hope to maintain a subsistence way of life based on the abundance of salmon, like the Sac and Fox of Illinois in 1812 attempted to save a way of life based on buffalo. Their vision of a B.C. coast protected from oil spills is as compelling as Catlins call for the perpetuation of another magnificent civilization.


The Standards cartoon also puts into disturbing context the Canadian governments combined celebration of the War of 1812 and causing the Niagara Region to be recognized as part of these events, as our nations Cultural Capital. The making of our region as the Cultural Capital, like the Standards distorted cartoon, represent an effort to have Niagara become a testing ground for making the efforts those who want to protect the environment look like treason.

Over the next three years as the war of 1812 is celebrated, we can look forward to a number of distorted historical interpretations that equate environmentalism with American sponsored extremism and subversion. Conservative spin doctors must be spinning out a monumental torrent of propaganda in all the diverse forms of high culture – plays about conniving Canadian tree huggers in 1812 colluding with American invaders to establish national parks, poems celebrating resistance to the imposition of U.S, eco-radicals, paintings celebrating how our affluent way of life was rescued from American wiles, posters of cars rising above slain bison, and a new version of the 1812 overture, combining the symphony in a Oratorio with a chorus proclaiming our rescue from the demise of American national parks.

A banner protesting plans for Northern Gateway pipeline from Alberta tarsands through native lands. Photo from Council of Canadians website.

Perhaps St. Catharines and Brock Universities new performing arts center will open with a gala grand opera on our heroic rescue from being an American park due to the courage of the gallant red coats.


The prospect of federal arts funding in Niagara as a test pilot for a new thrust for Canadian culture is deeply disturbing. It however, is a sorry pattern of what Catlin deplored in 1832. He was dismayed over how powerful writers and artists would not give up such creature comforts as wine and cigars in cozy studies- to study the magnificence of the native way of life that was being assaulted by American armies. Today it seems that the Standard cartoonists are simply the vanguard of a similar attempt to use money to manipulate the cultural understanding of our times. Instead of artists struggling to save the beauty of the Pacific coast we will get a torrent of odes to oil.

John Bacher in a St. Catharines, Ontario residents and long-time conservationist and member of the Niagara-based Preservation of Agricultural Lands Society.

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