We have been discussing this with Chuck, and every example we could find ended up looking like greater ( but squandered or unequally distributed within the band) opportunities for FN people.
So I kept looking. I've never heard of a First Nations homesteader, and it turns out there is a good reason for that. They were denied that opportunity by law. From StatsCan website, sourced from the Indian Act of 1876:
I think we can all agree that this was gross discrimination, and amounts to a huge discrepancy in opportunity compared to what was offered to immigrants from nearly everywhere else in the world.
Does anyone know if this policy has ever been reversed?
Was it ever challenged?
Any indication that it would have been taken advantage of if it were possible?
So I kept looking. I've never heard of a First Nations homesteader, and it turns out there is a good reason for that. They were denied that opportunity by law. From StatsCan website, sourced from the Indian Act of 1876:
For example, the Indian Act (1876) and its amendments prohibited First Nations homesteading and restricted the sale of First Nations agricultural products.
Does anyone know if this policy has ever been reversed?
Was it ever challenged?
Any indication that it would have been taken advantage of if it were possible?
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