Washing ceremony marks settlement of Canadian Tire racial profiling complaint


VANCOUVER — The sounds of Indigenous drums and song bounced off the walls of an East Vancouver banquet hall Tuesday evening as members of British Columbia’s Heiltsuk Nation gathered for a traditional washing ceremony years in the making.

Dawn Wilson and her father Richard filed a human rights complaint against Canadian Tire and security company Blackbird Security over a racial profiling incident at a store in Coquitlam.

Canadian Tire acknowledged its former employee contravened the human rights code against racial profiling and discrimination when they searched Richard Wilson’s bag in 2020.

The ceremony, held at the Croatian Cultural Centre on Commercial Drive, drew dozens to take part in the cultural healing process. Dawn Wilson thanked representatives of both companies for showing up.

“We wholeheartedly forgive everything that’s been done and are so thankful that you are here in this beautiful way to let this go with us,” she said. “I feel lighter and I hope that you do too.”

James Prescott, a vice president with Canadian Tire, called the incident “deeply regrettable.”

“On behalf of everybody at Canadian Tire, we are deeply sorry for what happened,” Prescott said.

Store owner Paul Droulis said it was “my store, my responsibility, my embarrassment.”

“From the bottom of my heart, I want to apologize because that is not how we treat our clients, it’s not how we treat our friends, it’s now how we treat people,” Droulis said.

Representatives of Canadian Tire and Blackbird Security were then wrapped in blankets and took part in a dance as part of the ceremony, circling the banquet hall floor to the rhythm of drums and singing.

Dawn Wilson said in an interview she’s relieved the case has been settled and hopes it will help others avoid the same thing.

The store itself admitted a former employee made derogatory comments when told about what happened, and Canadian Tire Corp. acknowledges it did not forward a complaint to the Coquitlam store for weeks — only doing so after the employee no longer worked there.

The traditional Heiltsuk washing ceremony is a form of restorative justice that acknowledges the harm of racial profiling.

Maria Martin with the Heiltsuk Tribal Council told those gathered that the “harm went beyond the moment” of the confrontation at the store.

“It’s part of a broader pattern of racial profiling and disrespect that Heiltsuk and other Indigenous people face in everyday life,” she said. “Dawn and Richard brought a human rights complaint not just for themselves, but for all Heiltsuk and other Indigenous members who live with this indignity far too often.”



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