Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Funeral to be held for Caroline Marshall-Hobbs, mother of Donald Marshall Jr.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Dec, 2014 10:47 AM

SYDNEY, N.S. — A funeral will be held Tuesday for a Mi'kmaq woman known as a source of strength for her community when her son was wrongfully imprisoned and First Nations struggled for aboriginal rights.

Caroline Marshall-Hobbs died on Christmas Eve at the age of 86 in Sydney, N.S.

She was the mother of the late Donald Marshall Jr., whose wrongful conviction as a 17-year-old for a murder he didn't commit brought scrutiny to Nova Scotia's justice system.

Cheryl Maloney, president of the Nova Scotia Aboriginal Women's Association, says Marshall-Hobbs will be remembered for her quiet strength during her son's 11-year incarceration and for the support she provided to her husband Donald Marshall Sr., who served as grand chief for almost three decades.

"She carried that dignity, that class through some of the most horrific times that a mother could imagine," she said.

"Her and her husband, the grand chief, they carried the nation."

Maloney says Marshall-Hobbs assisted her husband as they lobbied for improved Mi'kmaq rights when funding for aboriginal groups was much lower.

"They led when we had nothing," she said. "She was a matriarch not just by her husband's side but by the nation's side."

"They went to all the wakes. They went to all the communities and they led with such class at a time her own son was incarcerated."

As leaders in the community of Membertou, the Marshall family was often expected to provide food and assistance to the less fortunate. Maloney said it was a role that Marshall-Hobbs embraced, welcoming visitors from distant communities along with neighbours seeking help.

Maloney said Marshall-Hobbs will also be remembered as a woman of faith who maintained and encouraged the Mi'kmaq language and the traditional arts, such as basket making.

"There's a strength and leadership with our women. But it's a quiet strength. It's a quiet leadership and she portrays it beautifully," she said.

Her obituary says Marshall-Hobbs was recipient of the Membertou Citizen of the Year Award and the Atlantic Aboriginal Lifetime Achievement Award.

Maloney said Marshall-Hobbs helped guide Donald Marshall Jr. when he launched a legal challenge after being charged in 1993 with fishing eels out of season. The resulting Supreme Court of Canada decision in his favour found that the Mi'kmaq have the right to harvest and sell fish to sustain a moderate livelihood for their families.

Marshall-Hobbs's obituary says she had 36 grandchildren, 43 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren.

MORE National ARTICLES

A look at what went wrong with the Nutrition North food subsidy program

A look at what went wrong with the Nutrition North food subsidy program
IQALUIT, Nunavut — For years, northerners have complained about Nutrition North to anyone who would listen, grumbling that the $60-million annual federal food subsidy was doing little to ease their staggering grocery costs.

A look at what went wrong with the Nutrition North food subsidy program

Federal polls show race is tightening but can't explain the reasons why

Federal polls show race is tightening but can't explain the reasons why
OTTAWA — A spate of public opinion surveys this autumn has prompted the usual end-of-year parsing of political fortunes and chin-stroking prognostications about a federal election that may still be 10 months in the future.

Federal polls show race is tightening but can't explain the reasons why

Police say 3-year-old boy struck in face, abandoned at Surrey, B.C., bus stop

Police say 3-year-old boy struck in face, abandoned at Surrey, B.C., bus stop
SURREY, B.C. — RCMP say they have made an arrest after receiving reports that a three-year-old boy was struck in the face and abandoned at a bus stop in Surrey, B.C.

Police say 3-year-old boy struck in face, abandoned at Surrey, B.C., bus stop

SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault

SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault
VANCOUVER — SkyTrain service has been halted between two busy stations in the Metro Vancouver area after what transit officials believe is an electrical fault.

SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault

B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand

B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand
VANCOUVER — Poultry producers are assuring B.C. residents there will be plenty of turkeys on store shelves during the holidays despite an avian flu outbreak that has killed thousands of animals.

B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand

Oilsands leak that fouled aquifer is close to site where oil bubbled to surface

Oilsands leak that fouled aquifer is close to site where oil bubbled to surface
EDMONTON — A Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. oilsands operation that has contaminated a groundwater aquifer is renewing questions about a technology that has already been linked to another serious leak in northern Alberta.

Oilsands leak that fouled aquifer is close to site where oil bubbled to surface