Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, landed Thursday in Yellowknife, where they were to speak with First Nations chiefs on the final day of their royal visit that has focused on Indigenous issues and climate change.
The couple were greeted on the tarmac by Yellowknife Mayor Rebecca Alty and Margaret Thom, the commissioner of the Northwest Territories.
They were also presented with flowers wrapped in birch tree bark by Sahᾴí̜ʔᾳ May Talbot, a face familiar to APTN News followers with her fight with federal and territorial officials over recognition of her traditional name and spelling.
The couple were next to go to the Yellowknives Dene First Nation community of Dettah, where Prince Charles was to speak with First Nations chiefs and hear about Indigenous-led solutions to climate change.
They were greeted by a large group at the Yellowknives Dene First Nation community of Dettah. The First Nation east of Yellowknife has a population of just over 200 people and dozens came out to shake hands with the couple.
Many of those who came were wearing orange clothing and other items with the words “every child matters” representing the legacy of residential schools.
Charles spoke with Dettah Chief Edward Sangris and Ndilo Chief Fred Sangris about the symbolism of the ceremony and previous royal visits to the North before a private meeting with Indigenous leadership.
The trip has been shaped by Canada’s reckoning with its relationship and history with Indigenous people as possible graves continue to be found at the sites of former residential schools across the country.
The duchess was to stop at a school to hear about programs aimed at preserving Indigenous languages, and the prince was to be made an honorary Canadian Ranger.
Their trip has been shaped by Canada’s reckoning with its relationship and history with Indigenous people as possible graves continue to be found at the sites of former residential schools across the country.
The three-day tour began Tuesday in Newfoundland and Labrador, where Prince Charles recognized the visit came at an important moment.
“We must find new ways to come to terms with the darker and more difficult aspects of the past, acknowledging, reconciling and striving to do better,” he said.
The royal couple next headed to Ottawa, where they attended a church service at a Ukrainian Orthodox cathedral and met with a family displaced by the Russian invasion.
During a Platinum Jubilee reception at Rideau Hall on Wednesday evening, Gov. Gen. Mary Simon encouraged the couple to listen to Indigenous leaders, elders and community members in the North. Simon said those stories are an integral part of the journey toward reconciliation.
RoseAnne Archibald, the national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, said during the reception that she asked the prince for a formal apology from the Queen, as head of the Church of England. Metis National Council President Cassidy Caron also said she intended to use the occasion to request an apology.
Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller said Thursday that while all effective power rests with the government, not with the Queen, he understands comments from the royals could be important to some Indigenous people.
“It’s nuanced,” he said. “There are some Indigenous Peoples ?_ much like non-Indigenous people ?_ who couldn’t care less. There are many who have a profound deep connection to the Royal Family.”
The last royal visit to Northwest Territories was in 2011, when Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, were welcomed by large crowds during a one-day stop in the North during a whirlwind first royal tour for the newlyweds.
This royal visit was to culminate with a celebration in Yellowknife in honour of the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.