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Canadian lawyer and politician (1951–2024) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Calvin Murray Sinclair CC OM MSC (Ojibway name Mizanay (Mizhana) Gheezhik; January 24, 1951 – November 4, 2024) was a Canadian politician who was a member of the Senate, and a First Nations lawyer who served as chairman of the Indian Residential Schools Truth and Reconciliation Commission from 2009 to 2015.[4]
Murray Sinclair | |
---|---|
15th Chancellor of Queen's University | |
In office July 1, 2021 – June 30, 2024 | |
Principal | Patrick Deane |
Preceded by | Jim Leech |
Succeeded by | Shelagh Rogers |
Canadian Senator from Manitoba | |
In office April 2, 2016 – January 31, 2021 | |
Nominated by | Justin Trudeau |
Preceded by | Rod Zimmer |
Succeeded by | Gigi Osler |
Chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada | |
In office 2009–2015 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Succeeded by | Position abolished |
Personal details | |
Born | January 24, 1951 Selkirk, Manitoba, Canada |
Died | November 4, 2024 73) Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | (aged
Political party | Independent Senators Group |
Spouse | Katherine Morrisseau-Sinclair |
Children | 5, including Niigaan[2][3] |
Residence | St. Andrews, Manitoba |
Alma mater | University of Winnipeg (BA) University of Manitoba (LLB) |
Awards | Order of Canada Meritorious Service Cross Order of Manitoba |
Signature | |
Sinclair previously served as Manitoba's first Indigenous judge from 1988 to 2009, and was appointed to the Senate of Canada on April 2, 2016. In November 2020, he announced his retirement from the Senate effective January 31, 2021.[5]
Queen's University announced the appointment of Sinclair as the 15th chancellor, succeeding Jim Leech.[6] He assumed the role on July 1, 2021.[6] He declined to seek reappointment, with his term expiring on June 30, 2024. Instead, he accepted a new role as the Chancellor Emeritus and Special Advisor to the Principal on Reconciliation of Queen's University.[7]
Calvin Murray Sinclair was born on January 24, 1951,[1][8][9] and raised on the former St. Peter's Indian Reserve (existed along the shores of the Red River north to the mouth of Netley Creek from 1817-1908 and forced to move to Peguis First Nation) in the Selkirk area north of Winnipeg, Manitoba. His parents were Henry and Florence (née Mason) Sinclair.[10] His siblings were Richard, Henry Jr. (Buddy) and Dianne. An older sister had died in infancy. Their mother, Florence, died in April 1952 following a stroke, and they were raised by their grandparents Jim and Catherine Sinclair in St. Peter's.[10]
After graduating from high school (Selkirk Collegiate Institute) as class valedictorian and Athlete of the Year in 1968,[4] Sinclair attended the University of Manitoba's School of Physical Education, but left before graduating to take care of his ailing grandmother after his grandfather died in 1970.[10] He then worked at the Selkirk Friendship Centre as an administrator and youth worker and was elected vice president of the Manitoba Metis Federation for the Interlake Region in 1971.[10] In 1972, he went to work for Howard Pawley Q.C., who was at that time the Member of the Legislative Assembly for Selkirk and the Attorney General of Manitoba, as his executive assistant.[10]
In 1976, Sinclair continued his academic career at the University of Winnipeg, studying sociology and history.[10] He then attended law school at the Faculty of Law at the University of Manitoba, and graduated in 1979, having won the A.J. Christie Prize awarded to the top student in litigation in his second year of legal studies.[11]
Sinclair also spent his teenage years as an air cadet with #6 Jim Whitecross Royal Canadian Air Cadet Squadron.[12]
This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2021) |
Sinclair was called to the Manitoba Bar in 1980.[10] Over the course of his legal practice, Sinclair practised primarily in the fields of Civil and Criminal Litigation Human Rights law, and Indigenous Law.[10] He represented a cross-section of clients but was known for his representation of Aboriginal people and his knowledge of Aboriginal legal issues, having taught courses on Aboriginal People and the Law in the Department of Native Studies at the University of Manitoba since 1981.[10] Sinclair also served as legal counsel for the First Nations of Manitoba, representing them in the areas of land claims, legislative initiatives, funding negotiations and the negotiation of Child Welfare Agreements following the release of the Kimelman Report into Child Welfare in Manitoba. Sinclair acted as legal counsel for the Manitoba Human Rights Commission. He was also an adjunct professor of law and an adjunct professor in the Faculty of Graduate Studies at the University of Manitoba.[citation needed]
Sinclair was appointed associate chief judge of the Provincial Court of Manitoba in March 1988, becoming the first Aboriginal judge in the province.[10]
As associate chief judge, Sinclair was appointed co-commissioner, along with Court of Queen's Bench Associate Chief Justice A. C. Hamilton, of Manitoba's Public Inquiry into the Administration of Justice and Aboriginal People (The Aboriginal Justice Inquiry).[10] The AJI report was an extensive study of issues plaguing the relationship between Aboriginal people in Manitoba and the justice system and had a significant impact on law and legal policy in Canada. It was referred to in the Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples of Canada as well as by the Canadian Bar Association in its report on Aboriginal People and the law of Canada.[citation needed]
In November 2000, Sinclair completed the "Report of the Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Inquest", a study into the deaths of twelve children in the pediatric cardiac surgery program of the Winnipeg Health Sciences Centre in 1994.[10] That report led to significant changes in pediatric cardiac surgery in Manitoba and the study of medical and systemic errors in Canada.[10]
He was appointed to the Court of Queen's Bench of Manitoba in January 2001 and was the province's first Aboriginal person to be appointed a judge on that court.[4] While a judge of that court, Justice Sinclair was asked to chair Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), a request he initially declined due to the expected emotional toll.[10] When the initial TRC chair resigned and the other commissioners were replaced, Sinclair was asked, and agreed, to reconsider. In 2009, he was appointed as its chair, on the condition that the decision-making process switched from voting to consensus.[10]
After the TRC completed its final report in 2015, Sinclair announced his retirement from the bench and his intention to withdraw from public life. He was asked by leaders of Manitoba's Indigenous community to allow them to nominate him for an appointment to Canada's Senate, and with the support of his family, he agreed. He was appointed as a senator from Manitoba in April 2016. Since being appointed to the Senate, Sinclair helped form the Independent Senators Group and sat on the Senate Standing Committees on Aboriginal/Indigenous Peoples, Fisheries and Oceans, Legal and Constitutional issues, Rules, Ethics and Conflicts of Interest.[citation needed]
He also acted as a mediator, made numerous public appearances on matters relating to Indigenous issues and the Senate of Canada, and was asked to investigate the role of the Police Services Board of Thunder Bay, Ontario, in the light of allegations of systemic racism in policing in that community. That report was completed in October 2018.[citation needed]
Sinclair retired from the Senate in 2021.[10]
As of 2022, Sinclair worked as a lawyer at Winnipeg law firm Cochrane Saxberg.[13]
Sinclair was appointed the chair of Canada's Indian Residential Schools Truth and Reconciliation Commission in June 2009. The commission's mandate stemmed from the terms of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement as a means by which Residential School Survivors and former staff could inform all Canadians about what happened in Indian Residential Schools and document the accounts of survivors, former staff, families, communities and anyone personally affected by the Indian Residential Schools experience.[4]
The TRC held hundreds of public and private hearings throughout Canada and documented over 6,000 statements of Survivors and more than 200 from former staff, all of which led to the commission's massive multi-volume Final Report released on December 15, 2015. The Report documented the history of residential schools in Canada, noting that the Government of Canada had legally mandated the forcible removal of children from their families and communities to remove them from the cultural influence of their parents, families and communities. The schools were established to force Indigenous children to stop speaking their unique languages or following their unique cultural beliefs and practices and to adopt Euro-Canadian cultures and languages. This major finding of the Report – that Canada established and maintained its forcible removal and Residential School policy for the primary purpose of eliminating Aboriginal cultures and racial identity – led to its conclusion that Canada had committed cultural genocide.[14]
The report also noted that the Government refused to include in the Settlement Agreement, those schools to which Indigenous children were sent by direction of the government, but which were managed by the church or other organizations, as well as schools that had been established in Newfoundland and Labrador before it entered into Confederation in 1949. The Report called upon Canada to address that issue quickly and collaboratively.[15]
The report contained 94 Calls to Action and called upon all parts of Canadian Society to commit to reconciliation and to build a more respectful relationship between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people. Sinclair wrote: “…[R]econciliation is not an Indigenous problem. It is a Canadian one. It is one in which all Canadians are implicated.”[16]
In his final speech at the release of the summary of the commission’s report, on June 2, 2015, Sinclair acknowledged that reconciliation was going to be difficult. Perhaps, more difficult than getting at the truth behind Residential Schools, but it had to be done. He addressed all of Canada when he stated: “We have described for you a mountain. We have shown you the way to the top. We call upon you to do the climbing.”[15]
Sinclair was a Fourth Degree Midewiwin member of the Three Fires Society,[17] a traditional Ojibway medicine society of great significance to the Ojibway people.[citation needed]
Sinclair's traditional Ojibway name was Mizanay Gheezhik, meaning "the One Who Speaks of Pictures in the Sky”.[4] He was named by Traditional Ojibway Teacher and Elder Onaubinisay (Jim Dumont).[18][19][20]
Sinclair had two children (son Niigaan Sinclair) from his first marriage to Jeanette Warren. He was later married to Katherine Morrisseau-Sinclair (1955-2024)[21][22] and they had a daughter. Additionally, the Sinclair family adopted two daughters into the family.[23]
Sinclair died at St. Boniface Hospital in Winnipeg, on November 4, 2024, at the age of 73.[24][25] Murray was interred at Glen Eden Cemetery in Winnipeg.[26]
Sinclair served on numerous community boards including The Jemima Centre for the Handicapped, Scouts Canada, The John Howard Society, The Royal Canadian Air Cadets, The Canadian Club, The Canadian Native Law Students Association, The Canadian Indian Lawyers Association (now the Indigenous Bar Association), The Social Planning Council of Winnipeg, the Ma Mawi Wi Chi Itata Centre, AbinochiZhawaynDakooziwin Ojibway Immersion Nursery School Board, the Selkirk Friendship Centre, the Manitoba Provincial Judges Association, the Manitoba Bar Association, the National Judicial Institute and the board of regents of the University of Winnipeg.[4]
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