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Charles to ‘highlight Queen’s affection for Canada and its people’ during trip

The prince’s tour of Canada will be his 19th visit to the country and the duchess’s fifth.

Tony Jones
Tuesday 17 May 2022 02:54 EDT
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall (PA)
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall (PA) (PA Wire)

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The Prince of Wales is expected to speak about the Queen’s “profound affection she feels for Canada and its people” when he begins his tour of the country.

Charles, who will be joined by the Duchess of Cornwall, will begin a three-day trip by acknowledging the treatment of indigenous people in Canada’s residential schools when their tour of the nation begins later.

Within hours of landing in the Commonwealth country, the couple will take part in a “solemn moment of reflection and prayer” in a garden dedicated to indigenous victims of the school system which saw thousands abused.

The trip is part of Canada’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations marking the Queen’s 70-year reign and Charles is expected to speak of “service to family, to community and to country”, which is “what makes Canada so special and what my family and I have long admired”.

During their three-day visit, the couple will also recognise the country’s response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and meet members of Canada’s Ukrainian community, the largest outside Europe.

Charles and Camilla will highlight causes they have championed in the past, from supporting the victims of domestic abuse, highlighting the issue of climate change and recognising the role of Canada’s Armed Forces.

Chris Fitzgerald, deputy private secretary to the prince for foreign, commonwealth and development affairs, said when the tour was announced last month: “To celebrate the Queen’s outstanding example of service over seven decades, Their Royal Highnesses are particularly looking forward to meeting some of the many Canadians who have served in their own communities over the years and most recently through the pandemic.”

The tour will begin in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador and also see the couple travel to Ottawa and Yellowknife, the capital city of the Northwest Territories.

Mr Fitzgerald added that, following a formal welcome: “Their Royal Highnesses will first take part in a solemn moment of reflection and prayer at the Heart Garden, on the grounds of Government House, with indigenous leaders and community members in the spirit of Reconciliation.

“Heart Gardens are in memory of all indigenous children who were lost to the residential school system, in recognition of those who survived, and the families of both.”

Canada has been coming to terms with the grim discovery last year of hundreds of human remains in unmarked graves at former church-run schools – institutions to which indigenous children were forcibly relocated for generations.

From the 19th century until the 1970s, more than 150,000 indigenous children were forced to attend state-funded Christian boarding schools in an effort to assimilate them into Canadian society. Thousands of children died of disease and other causes, with many never returned to their families.

The Canadian government has acknowledged that physical and sexual abuse was rampant in the schools, with students beaten for speaking their native languages.

Recent royal tours to the Caribbean by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Earl and Countess of Wessex have faced criticism from campaigners seeking reparations for slavery or their nations to become republics, with some images from William and Kate’s visit to Jamaica accused by critics of harking back to colonial days.

Mr Fitzgerald said: “Throughout the tour, Their Royal Highnesses will take the opportunity to continue to engage with indigenous communities.”

Highlights of the visit will see the couple tour the family-run Quidi Vidi Brewery famous for their “iceberg” beer made from 20,000-year-old water harvested from icebergs which migrate seasonally to Newfoundland.

In Ottawa, Charles will discuss the impact of global warming and engage with leaders from across public, private and philanthropic sectors working to build a green economy.

With the Northwest Territories warming at about three times the global rate, Charles will visit its ice road passage or Yellowknife Bay to see the impact of climate change on local communities.

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