A potent symbol of First Nations rights sat for years in DFO storage, but now it's home
Donald Marshall's nets will be put on display in his Cape Breton community of Membertou
Jeff Ward was in the middle of a meeting last month in Truro, N.S., when he received a text that made him jump out of his chair.
It was the day before the 20th anniversary of the Supreme Court's landmark Marshall decision on First Nations fishing rights, and the text was from Hubert Nicholas, director of fisheries for Membertou First Nation on Cape Breton Island.
"I was like, 'Oh my God,'" Ward said in an interview. "I couldn't believe what I was seeing. I couldn't believe this existed."
Sent to him was a photo of Donald Marshall Jr.'s eel nets, the same ones seized more than two decades ago when the Mi'kmaw man was charged with fisheries offences, a case that would reshape First Nations fisheries in Atlantic Canada.
The photo showed the nets being taken out of a storage unit at a Department of Fisheries and Oceans office in Antigonish, N.S., to be driven back to the late Marshall's home community of Membertou.
After consulting with the Marshall family and the chief of Membertou, the nets will be displayed at Membertou Heritage Park, a two hectare site that Ward manages and which offers a living history of the people of the community.
On Sept. 17, 1999, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that Marshall, who had been charged with fishing eels out of season, fishing without a licence and fishing with an illegal net, was justified in doing so under the 1760s Peace and Friendship treaties signed with the British Crown.
The ruling affirmed a two-century-old treaty right allowing Indigenous Peoples to earn a "moderate livelihood" through commercial fishing in Atlantic Canada, although the court later issued a clarification that reinforced the federal government's power to regulate it.
Ward grew up idolizing Marshall, who died in 2009.
Marshall first came to public prominence after being wrongfully convicted of murder in 1971. He spent 11 years in prison and was later exonerated by a royal commission that detailed how he'd been failed by a justice system plagued by incompetence and racist attitudes.
"I had the honour to live on the same street as him," said Ward.
"He stood up for our rights. He honoured the injustice."
In 1993, Marshall and a companion landed 463 pounds of eel they had caught from a small outboard motorboat in the waters of Pomquet Harbour in northern Nova Scotia. They sold the catch for $787.10.
Marshall was charged by DFO and prosecuted. It took six years for his case to reach the Supreme Court. But it would be another two decades before a great symbol of the case, Marshall's nets, would see the light of day.
Earlier this year, Sana Kavanagh, a fisheries science liaison co-ordinator at the Confederacy of Mainland Mi'kmaq, was taking a tour of the Antigonish DFO office when she spotted a frame hanging on the wall.
It's strange to me that something that represents such an important part of history was just in a room but not really known to the community.- Sana Kavanagh, of the Confederacy of Mainland Mi'kmaq
In it was a weathered piece of net that once belonged to Marshall.
Soon after the initial awe wore off, she felt the need to tell someone. After a conversation with an employee at the DFO office, she found out there were more nets in storage.
"It's strange to me that something that represents such an important part of history was just in a room but not really known to the community," Kavanagh said.
Kavanagh was concerned the nets hadn't been properly preserved over the last 20 years, so she searched for an archeologist and found Heather MacLeod-Leslie at the Kwilmu'kw Maw-klusuaqn Mi'kmaq Rights Initiative.
"I'm really one small link in a very long chain," said MacLeod-Leslie, referring to the group effort that's gone into getting the nets back. "The nets have been out of water for more than 20 years. Every day, every minute, counts."
Getting the nets wasn't immediate. There were dozens of calls and emails. DFO had to go through its own procedures in order to release them, said Kavanagh.
Months went by and the 20th anniversary commemoration of the Marshall decision was nearing. The Kwilmu'kw Maw-klusuaqn Mi'kmaq Rights Initiative was hosting a conference in Membertou in mid-September of Mi'kmaw leaders to discuss moderate livelihood.
Tonight our community and staff participated in two very special dinners. Chief Terry spoke of the heroism of Donald Marshall Jr. on the 20th anniversary of the Marshall Decision.<br><br>“Jr. was like a brother to me and we spoke many times during his case” -Chief Terry Paul. <a href="https://t.co/qlMTyr1Sd1">pic.twitter.com/qlMTyr1Sd1</a>
—@MembertouCorp
"I thought, 'Geez, wouldn't it be nice if we could have them at the conference?'" Kavanagh said.
It was later that day the nets arrived, a return that was announced during the conference.
MacLeod-Leslie said they will be removing as much salt as possible from the fibres of the nets, as it will degrade them. They will also be removing dirt and mud.
Once they are in better condition and a formal space has been made at the Membertou Heritage Park, the nets will be on permanent display.
Ward said there isn't an exact date for display, but the community will be notified when there is one.