N.S. pardons late Mi’kmaq leader: ‘He was the first to stand up for us’
HALIFAX — Gabriel Sylliboy died feeling like he failed his Mi’kmaq people.
The grand chief launched a fight for aboriginal rights after being charged with illegal hunting in the 1920s, but the courts of the era dismissed the notion that a 1752 treaty gave Sylliboy any rights.
It would take another six decades before those rights were recognized by the courts.
“Our grand chief was really quite sad about the fact that he was charged and wasn’t able to be successful in obtaining Mi’kmaq rights for his people,” said Jaime Battiste, the province’s treaty education lead.


