Quebec spends $1.6 million editing history textbooks to use proper Indigenous terms
MONTREAL — The Quebec government has just spent $1.6 million to replace the word “Amerindian” and modify other Indigenous content in history textbooks that had been introduced only two years earlier.
Amid controversy over the price tag, First Nations leaders say the changes were an essential gesture of respect.
“Indian has been a term being used for decades, if not centuries, and we have to look around us and understand that the world is evolving, and so are the references made to our peoples,” Ghislain Picard, chief of the Assembly of First Nations Quebec-Labrador, said in an interview.
He said “Autochtones” in French or “Indigenous peoples” in English are the accepted terms today. “Any notion that we would be ‘Indians of the Americas’ — which is what Amerindian tends to imply — is totally false and needs to be corrected.”


