In addition to my above post, I figured I should expand it a bit as to why the North End could be the centre of the next Aboriginal rights movement:
The Aboriginal People have long been Canada’s most marginalized and oppressed group in Canadian society, a legacy of the genocidal residential schools, the Sixties Scoop, the Treaties and many other atrocities committed upon them. For most of Canadian history, the Aboriginal People have remained silent, quietly passing on the learned conditions and atrocities of the past onto the next generation, while Canada also sat quiet on the issue. The Aboriginal People have let their collective voices been known before, however only three times did it really reach the national stage and did our politicians pay attention, these events including the American Indian Movement, the Oka Crisis and Idle No More.
A major factor to consider as to why the Aboriginal rights movements was not as widely known and successful as the Civil Rights Movement in the United States is geography. Where the African-American population is highly urbanized, centred in many American inner cities, the Aboriginal population is widespread, with the nearly half still living in remote reserves. As the Aboriginal population continues to urbanize, so will the population’s ability to gather cohesively, with Canadian cities becoming the centre for a growing Aboriginal rights movement. Aboriginal people are slowly once again finding their voice, and being the fastest growing demographic in Canada, it will only become more forceful in federal and provincial politics. What will become of cities with already large Aboriginal populations (~10% or more) like Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Regina and Thunder Bay, will these movements be embraced by these cities or shunned? Looking at the response to recent protests in the United States like Ferguson, Missouri or Baltimore, Maryland, anything similar in Canada would certainly prove to be controversial and polarizing. How could such a movement change the landscape of the Canadian city, in the cases of some American cities, it lead to their long-term decline as race relations became an issue not only for those marginalized minority groups.
Should the federal government not make a serious attempt at implementing the recommendations of the TRC, the issue will only become further heightened and the chance of a real revolution more likely. Empty words and broken promises can only fool a person for so long, until they must act on their own, through whatever means necessary.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/...ticle33436120/
http://news.nationalpost.com/news/ca...y-author-warns
Please not my above hypothesis is for discussion, not meant to paint a negative light in any way of the Aboriginal People.