First Nations, developer call for return and protection of sacred burial site in AbbotsfordBusiness | 207028 hits | Jun 14 5:05 pm | Posted by: N_Fiddledog Commentsview comments in forum Page 1 You need to be a member of CKA and be logged into the site, to comment on news. |
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Good frickin' grief.
why should the province pay? If they want it as a private burial plot let them buy it. Or the developer wanting to do the right thing should just give it to them........lol
I�m gonna build a condo on top of your grandmothers grave. If you have a problem with that you can buy her grave back from me
"According to oral history, an overconfident shaman came into conflict with the powerful creature Thunderbird, who turned him to rock and split him in four pieces."
Good frickin' grief.
Is the story about the talking snake, magic fruit, a guy who built a boat big enough to save all the worlds animals from a flood that drowned the entire world, another guy who lived inside if a whale, another guy whi walked who water, raised the dead, turned water into wine then came back from the dead himsel, etc.any better?
"According to oral history, an overconfident shaman came into conflict with the powerful creature Thunderbird, who turned him to rock and split him in four pieces."
Good frickin' grief.
Is the story about the talking snake, magic fruit, a guy who built a boat big enough to save all the worlds animals from a flood that drowned the entire world, another guy who lived inside if a whale, another guy whi walked who water, raised the dead, turned water into wine then came back from the dead himsel, etc.any better?
Nope and I don't believe in any of that either.
why should the province pay? If they want it as a private burial plot let them buy it. Or the developer wanting to do the right thing should just give it to them........lol
The thing is that the Natives and the developers both want the province to give the site an appropriate designation so that development on it is prohibited. That might not happen if the developers end up losing the land due to bankruptcy or something like that.
And as for why the province should pay, it would be either the province or the feds that probably didn't keep track of the land properly and allowed the developers to buy what they'd later find would be a pig in a poke.
Besides, the article itself points out that the site where a bunch of non-Natives died in a plane crash was designated as a memorial site. So why is it such a big deal that the Natives want a burial site of theirs to have the same designation? Would this be an issue if neglect had led to developers potentially building on a graveyard full of white people?