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Acadia:
Peaceful, Prosperous, Stateless
by
Chantal K. Saucier
by Chantal K. Saucier
This
year marks the 250th anniversary of the Acadian deportation,
a cruel episode that left the year 1755 stamped on the collective
memory of Acadians throughout the world. By today’s standards, most
agree that the deportation, at the onset of the French and Indian
War, was nothing less than an attempt at ethnic cleansing (the first
by Americans against a north American people). At the time, however,
the officials who planned the atrocities believed that ridding Acadia
of its inhabitants, in order to settle their lands with good English
subjects, was "noble." In the Pennsylvania Gazette
of September 4, 1755, we find: "We are now upon a great and
noble Scheme of sending the neutral French out of this Province,
who have always been secret Enemies, and have encouraged our Savages
to cut our throats." (Quoted from A
Great and Noble Scheme by John Mack Faragher.)
The
deportation had several goals. One was the confiscation of what
were considered the best cultivable lands in North America, while
another was the dispersal of the inhabitants in English colonies
in order to assimilate them into the Anglo-Saxon culture. A third,
I would argue, was to destroy what was becoming a thriving libertarian
community. In fact, the Acadians appear to have been the ones with
a great and noble scheme, that of establishing a stateless, free
society. But throughout history, few things seem to have upset rulers
more than the unwillingness of a people to submit. Some things just
never change.
Drawn
mostly from peasant stock, the Frenchmen who settled Acadia in the
early 17th century left behind a feudal system in which
land ownership was denied to them, to move to a continent with vast
open spaces where, for the first time, they were able to cultivate
a piece of land for themselves. Geographic isolation, the fact that
they lived outside the main communication and commercial channels,
and the failure of Britain and France to establish a permanent government
in Acadia, allowed the Acadian people the free enjoyment of their
liberty for more than a century. In The
Founding of New Acadia, historian Carl Brasseaux wrote:
The power
vacuum existing within the colony during the early seventeenth
century and the resulting civil war taught the colonists to think
and act in their own best interests. For example, from 1655 to
1755, the century before the Grand Dérangement (as the
Acadian dispersal is popularly known), the Acadians did not hesitate
to protest the actions of local administrators and clergymen to
higher authorities in Quebec and France. When appeals proved ineffective,
the colonists resorted to procrastination, subterfuge, and other
forms of passive resistance to foil unpopular administrative policies.
[. . . ].
Though paradoxical on the surface, Acadian contentiousness clearly
reflects the eagerness of the frontiersmen to protect their newly
acquired and highly prized personal liberties from encroachment
on any level.
In
the literature, officials of the time are cited referring to the
Acadians as: half republicans (or republicans before there were
republicans), bad subjects, worst soldiers, unruly, stubborn, obstinate,
untamable, and ungovernable (more could be found, I’m sure). In
1720, Paul Mascarene said about the inhabitants of Les Mines: "All
the orders sent to them if not suiting to their humors, are scoffed
and laughed at, and they put themselves upon the footing of obeying
no Government." In 1749, the governor of Nova Scotia, Edward
Cornwallis, told the Acadians: "It appears to me that you think
yourselves independent of any government; and you wish to treat
with the king as if you were so."
For
one hundred years, the Acadians managed to live peacefully and to
remain neutral in a disputed territory while Acadia remained stateless
and became one of the most prosperous places in North America. Over
the years, Acadians did make pledges of allegiance to England, but
they always refused to take any oath that did not include the following
(libertarian) provisions:
- A recognition
of their property rights;
- freedom
to keep and practice their Catholic faith;
- and an
exemption from having to bear arms against the French and their
allies (allies here meaning the Mi’kmaq people, neighbors and
friends to the Acadians).
Acadians
also were free traders and they traded with all regardless of the
regulations the empires tried to impose on them (at some point,
British officials even outlawed commerce between the Acadians and
the Mi’kmaq in an effort to brake the alliance that had developed
between the two communities). There are reports that Acadians traveled
as far as the Caribbean islands, trading their products (which included
what was considered some of the best whiskey in North America) for
rum and other southern merchandise.
In
addition, historians have written that Acadians found all sorts
of means to evade taxes and some refused to answer censuses. In
the 1671 census, for example, we find that Pierre Lanoue, cooper,
"sent word that he was feeling fine and he did not want to
give his age."
Because
of all this, Acadians were often portrayed as a bunch of outlaws
and criminals, while on a political level, they have often been
described as being underdeveloped, or as "not quite there yet,"
because of their lack of state institutions. Few seem to have pondered
about whether or not the Acadians viewed a state as desirable. I
don’t think they did; I believe that they were beyond, not
behind.
During
this commemoration year, my hope is that Acadians around the world
will take some time to reflect, not only on the deportation and
the injustices that were committed against the Acadian people, but
also on whom the Acadians were before the Grand Dérangement and
what was really lost. Surely, Acadians are not to blame for the
evil acts of the British and American armed forces at the time,
but today’s Acadians only have themselves to blame for having lost
the eagerness to be free.
July
29, 2005
Chantal
K. Saucier, Ph.D., [send
her mail] writes from South Louisiana.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
Chantal
K. Saucier Archives
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