Boxes of parts to be assembled

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Kits.

Last seen on: Daily Celebrity Crossword – 11/10/19 People Sunday

Random information on the term “Kits”:

Kitsilano /kɪtsɪˈlænoʊ/ is a neighbourhood located on the unceded territory of the Musqueam People (xʷməθkʷəy̓əm), in the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Kitsilano is named after Squamish Chief August Jack Khatsahlano, and the neighborhood is located in Vancouver’s West Side along the south shore of English Bay, between the neighborhoods of West Point Grey and Fairview.

The name ‘Kitsilano’ is derived from X̱ats’alanexw, the name of a Squamish chief. The area has been home to the Squamish people (known as Sḵwx̱wú7mesh in the Squamish language) for thousands of years, sharing the territory with the Musqueam and the Tsleil-Waututh Peoples. All three Nations moved throughout their shared traditional territory, using the resources it provided for fishing, hunting, trapping and gathering.

In 1911, the Federal government amended the Indian Act to legalize the unsettling of reserves that “situated wholly or partly within an incorporated town or city having a population of [more] than eight thousand”, without the need for consent from the reserve’s residents (5-6), as “reserves in more densely populated areas early on became ‘coveted’ by newcomers, who sought to wrest [the Indigenous population] away by licit or illicit means” (3). Subsequently, both Provincial and Federal governments began the “unsettling of reserves” process, which was the “emptying” of the reserves that “be[came] a source of nuisance and an impediment to progress”, or, in other words, the government unsettled reserves for growing cities and potential business ventures (5). At this time in Canadian history, the Federal government had already isolated the Indigenous population on to morsels of reserve lands, only to further deprive Indigenous peoples of what the government first thought was negligible land. The amendment to the Indian Act stated that “an Indian reserve which adjoins or is situated wholly or partly within an incorporated town or city having a population of not less than eight thousand” could at the recommendation of the Superintendent General be removed without their consent if it was “having regard to the interest of the public” and by year end the reserve was sold to the Government of British Columbia. The Squamish Nation formally surrendered the majority of reserve to the federal government in 1946. Part of the expropriated land was used by the Canadian Pacific Railway who pursued selling the land they had deed to in the 1980s despite the original agreement with the Squamish Nation that they should regain control of the land. This went to court and in August 2002 The B.C. Court of Appeals upheld a lower courts ruling in favour of the Squamish. This Indian reserve land is at the foot of the Burrard Street Bridge, called senakw (commonly spelled Snauq historically) in the Squamish language, and sənaʔqʷ in the Musqueam people’s hən’q’əmin’əm’ language, where Xats’alanexw, also known as August Jack Khatsahlano, lived.

Kits on Wikipedia