Reconciliation is a value, not a policy

When reconciliation is a value as well as a necessity in order to uphold Canada’s place in the world, then it doesn't get bumped off the priority list in budgetary discussions. It retains its place, just as Indigenous Peoples retain their position as key partners in this country we call Canada. 
Red Sky Performance dancers, pictured on Sept. 30, 2019, at the Honouring National Day for Truth and Reconciliation ceremony at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Que. Values are not something that drop off the strategic list when times get tough. Values are the bedrock of the way we choose to be in the world, writes Rose LeMay.

In a time of fiscal restraint, why is it that inclusion and reconciliation are so easily dropped? Is it because it costs, and the inclusion of minorities is not worth the money?

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