I believe there is a lot to be learned from history. And much history can be learned from travel. History teaches us the truth about the past. At least it always tries to find the truth. Sometimes that truth lies underneath decades or even centuries of obfuscations or outright propagandist lies. Those lies were designed to obscure uncomfortable truths. I want to face those truths; not escape from them.
Barbara Huck’s book has helped to do that and it has enriched our journey. Huck made some very interesting comments about our Canadian history. As she explained,
Today, on the cusp of a new millennium, North Americans have more tools than ever before for travelling through time. Thanks to new technologies and new perspectives, we are well equipped to imagine life five thousand or five million years ago. We can contemplate doing blood tests on the body of an ancient trader found high on an Alpine pass or cloning a woolly mammoth in China. Yet for the most part, an appreciation of life here just 500 years ago eludes us.
I did not want to elude that story. I wanted to approach that history on this journey. I think it is important.
History is important because the truth is important. Nowadays a lot of people don’t want old monuments to be taken down. Some say that is erasing history. I disagree. Paying homage to old statues, or refusing to critique history is to erase history. Many people don’t want to look at our past history because it might make them uncomfortable. They prefer self-satisfying illusions. Personally, I would rather be disturbed in my comfortable pew than sit there in ignorance ignoring the truth. If the truth is not challenging its probably not the truth.