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HARRY DANIELS, NATIVE LEADER: 1940-2004
He negotiated the inclusion of the Métis in the Constitution Act in 1982 and twice served as head of their national organization



by ALLISON LAWLOR
The Globe and Mail
Friday, Nov 5, 2004

Harry Daniels, 1941-2004

A flamboyant and outspoken Métis leader from Saskatchewan, Harry Daniels shared something more than just a common heritage with his hero Louis Riel. Both men are credited with having introduced the rights of the Métis into the Constitution of Canada.

For Mr. Riel, it was in 1870 in Section 31 of the Manitoba Act. For Mr. Daniels, it was 112 years later, in Section 35 of the Constitution Act, said Paul Chartrand, a law professor at the University of Saskatchewan and a former commissioner on the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.

As president of the Native Council of Canada (now the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples), Mr. Daniels played a leading role in ensuring aboriginal and treaty rights were recognized in the 1982 Constitution Act and more specifically in negotiating the inclusion of the Métis into the act.

In the final hour, Mr. Daniels convinced Jean Chrétien, then Canada's Attorney-General, and the special Joint Committee of the Senate and House of Commons on the Constitution, that it was "good but not good enough" to simply have the wording "aboriginal peoples of Canada" in the Constitution. He argued that it must include the specific wording "the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada." After some last-minute negotiations, Mr. Daniels got what he wanted.

"This was the end of five years of hard work," Mr. Daniels told an audience at a Métis conference held in June of 2003 in Saskatoon. It would be Mr. Daniels's last public speech. "What I was fighting for ... was the rights of the Métis people and their rights in Confederation."

During the constitutional negotiations, Mr. Daniels was once asked who a Métis was. He is said to have shot straight up in his chair: "We know who we are . . . We self-identify, just like everybody else in this country."

Harry Daniels was born in a small community on the shores of Long Lake, about 40 kilometres from Regina. The child of Métis parents Henry and Emma Daniels, young Harry grew up at a time when being Métis meant "half-breed." It wasn't long before he set out to fight for the rights of his people.

After a couple of years in the navy, the young radical went off to work for the Company of Young Canadians, a voluntary organization created in the mid-1960s by the federal government that was later eventually disbanded.

In the late 1960s, Mr. Daniels was hired as co-ordinator of field workers at the Métis Association of Alberta, which meant travelling throughout the province, often to remote northern regions to help spread information and foster community organization.

"He was a mobilizer," said Tony Belcourt, president of the Métis Nation of Ontario, remembering the young Mr. Daniels. "He was super confident and brass as hell."

Mr. Daniels was hired to replace Maria Campbell, an aboriginal writer, playwright and filmmaker. She would become his life-long friend and creative partner. They later wrote a play together called One More Time.
By 1975, Mr. Daniels was president of the Native Council of Canada. He led the organization, considered the national voice for Métis and Non-Status Indian organizations across Canada, until 1981. He was back at the helm between 1997 and 2000. By that time it had changed its name and was called the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples.

Not one to mince words or hold back his thoughts, Mr. Daniels did not celebrate in 1998 after Jane Stewart, Canada's then minister of Indian affairs and northern development, read an official "Statement of Reconciliation" that acknowledged the damage done to the country's native peoples throughout history. Heralded as a long-overdue response to the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples released the previous year, Mr. Daniels fumed: "This was a shallow and ill-advised attempt at an apology."

On the international front, he called on the United Nations to pressure Canada to meet its obligations to the country's native peoples. He also participated in various UN initiatives and served as a director of the World Council of Indigenous Peoples.

His work took him worldwide and to all regions of the country. When Pope John Paul II made his historic visit to the Northwest Territories in 1984, Mr. Daniels greeted him in Yellowknife. In a gesture of welcome, he took off his jacket and gave it to the Pope as a gift.

Aside from his reputation as a masterful storyteller and a quick wit, Mr. Daniels's trademark was the black flat-crown hat he always wore. The hat was the kind Métis men used to wear when they went out on the buffalo hunt, Ms. Campbell said.

Mr. Daniels was also a TV and stage actor. He played Gabriel Dumont in a sweeping historical miniseries called Big Bear, which aired on CBC-TV in the late 1990s.

In March, the Métis National Council honoured Mr. Daniels when they presented him with the "Order of the Métis Nation." In June, he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Ottawa.

Harry Daniels was born on Sept. 16, 1940, in Regina Beach, Sask., and died on Sept. 6 in Regina. He was 63. He leaves his partner Cheryl Storkson and children Michael, Conway, Alexander, Gabriel, Chantelle and Chigal.

 

 

Article Archives

Globe and Mail
HARRY DANIELS, NATIVE LEADER: 1940-2004

He negotiated the inclusion of the Métis in the Constitution Act in 1982 and twice served as head of their national organization


Watch Video Clips of Harry W. Daniels in the Video Gallery

Comments from Professor Paul L. A. H. Chartrand, former Commissioner, Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.

Métis National Council Press Release
Métis Nation mourns the passing of Harry W. Daniels - A life long defender of Métis Rights

Congress of Aboriginal Peoples Press Release
Harry W. Daniels
1940 - 2004, In Memorium

Harry W. Daniels Gallery

Tribute
To submit your words of tribute to Harry Daniels or add photos for a memorial gallery email tributetoharry@metisnation.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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