Protest shuts down Pat Bay Highway for an hour
about 4 years in timescolonist
Pat Bay Highway is open again after a one-hour shut down after about 200 members of the W̱SÁNEĆ nation and their supporters held a protest at the intersection of the highway and Mount Newton Cross Road between 9 and 10 a.m. on Monday.
Some drivers got out of their cars and joined protesters who had gathered for a healing walk in solidarity with the Penelakut’s Nation’s March for the Children which took place at the same time in Chemainus.
The Penelakut Tribe and neighbouring First Nations were holding the event in remembrance of children who never made it home and the survivors of a former residential school on Penelakut Island, formerly known as Kuper Island.
Using ground-penetrating radar, about 160 undocumented and unmarked graves have been recently found on the grounds.
After the protest, the members made their way back to the nearby Tsawout First Nation where some spoke of the memories they carry.
“The children were crying ‘Help us, help us’ — and now the whole world knows,” said Liz Underwood, an elder and residential school survivor. “It means so much to me that my children and my grandchildren are now learning about this but it still hurts, it hurts so bad.”
Others who attended the march were too young to have gone to the schools but still remember the stories they heard.
“We were watching television one night and it was a story about a prison,” said Romaine Underwood, a member of the Tsawout First Nation. “A residential school survivor remarked how the sound of the doors clanging shut brought up memories of a similar sound when the doors to the dormitories were closed at night.”
During Monday’s protest, traffic was directed to secondary routes, causing delays for people trying to get to Swartz Bay ferry terminal. Protesters also chose the same intersection to shut down in February and October 2020. The first time was in support of five Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs who opposed the Coastal GasLink pipeline. In October the demonstration was over Mi’kmaq fishing rights.
Central Saanich public works crews deployed barriers to direct traffic while Emcon Services had their whole 20-person road crew manning the intersections leading up to Mount Newton Cross Road.
“All in all, people have been behaving today. Because of the time of year, there has been more traffic this time than in October,” said Stewart Westwood, division manager for Emcom South Island. “Still, the traffic north did not start to back up until later due to the hour of the day. Traffic was much lighter heading south.”
While this protest was in solidarity with Penelakut’s Nation, it also strikes close to home.
“We offer our prayers for them because we were in the catchment area, some of our children could have gone to that residential school,” said STIWET Elliott, a Grade 7 to 12 teacher and member of the Tsawout First Nation. “Many of our children lost their language, they lost their culture in an act of systemic cultural genocide. Some members of the tribe even ran away so that their children wouldn’t be taken.”
parrais@timescolonist.com