"We must cherish inheritance rights, we must protect our nationality for future young people, we must write down this story and tell it." (Louis Riel, 1884). Luilier loves his western Metis heritage and is a great man proved to be one of the most revolutionary people in Canadian Autonomy chronicles. Nonetheless, he is still one of the most controversial and inexplicable figures in Canada's history and leads to this problem, and he is a federal father or a rebellious rebel It is thought.
I believe Luirier has committed treason. Riel, Luirier is known by many names. He is known as a prophet, a politician, a villain, a hero, a madman, a fantasy, a hero, but Luirier is best explained as a traitor and he has many places I betrayed the Canadian way. . If passed, bill C - 417 will reverse Riel 's rebellion. Riel ordered murder by a man named Thomas Scott and organized an uprising that killed dozens of people to become territory leaders. In fact, most of Riel 's adulthood was spent in Canada and the United States, they called for a political conspiracy. Eventually, he was executed for many of his sins and due to his endless disarray about the Canadian government. This sentence may seem severe today, but that is not more serious than dozens of people in Scott 's execution failure and Riel' s rebellion. Life itself is very difficult. Corresponding punishment was considered very fair at that time. Luirier has treason in many ways
Louise David Riel (1844-1885), a Canadian folk hero and "Father of Manitoba", is a complex person whose behavior caused his dangerous crime. Riel was one of Canada's indigenous peoples and was the leader of Metis and founded a provisional government (then known as Asiniboia at the time) in Manitoba when joining the Canadian Commonwealth after the Red River Rebellion (1869 - 1870) Did. During the rebellion, Ryle's Metis refused to allow the English-speaking governor William McDougall to enter the area and Metis arrested and executed a man Thomas Scott, who threatened to kill. Riel. The Government of Canada believes that enforcement is a treason of treason, and Riel has been forced to exile in Montana. Lieel was elected to the Canadian Parliament three times during his expulsion, but he never served