Skip to main content

The Doctrine of Discovery has been rescinded by the Vatican. What happens next?

Sarain Fox of the Batchewana First Nation demonstrates outside the mass presided over by Pope Francis at the National Shrine of Saint Anne de Beaupre on July 28, 2022. AP Photo/John Locher

Two weeks ago, the Vatican released a statement denouncing the “Doctrine of Discovery,” a series of documents that Canadian governments have used to justify colonization for centuries.

In its denouncement, the Vatican decried the doctrine as “not part of the teaching of the Catholic Church,” adding the documents “have never been considered expressions of the Catholic faith.”

It also recognized the doctrine did not uphold the dignity and rights of Indigenous Peoples and was used to justify immoral acts against them.

The statement was a long time coming, says Andrea Palframan, communications director of RAVEN, a legal defence fund to assist Indigenous Peoples who enforce their rights and title to protect their ancestral territories.

“It’s been a process that the Vatican is responding to tremendous activism and tireless work by Indigenous Peoples,” she added. “It's gone on for, really, generations.”

The Catholic Church has denounced the Doctrine of Discovery, but it lingers in Canadian law whenever there is a dispute over land and Indigenous title. What happens next? #Reconciliation #TheDoctrineHasBeenRescinded #Reconciliation

Palframan calls activists and others who have pushed the Vatican for change the real authors of the denouncement.

In recent years, for example, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission called on the Vatican to denounce the Doctrine of Discovery. Assembly of First Nations National Chief RoseAnne Archibald told Canada’s National Observer last year that she asked the Pope to rescind the doctrine during his visit to Canada. At a mass in the Basilica of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré in Québec City, led by Pope Francis last summer, two activists dropped a banner that read, “Rescind the Doctrine.”

Here’s what you need to know about the Doctrine of Discovery, how it fits into Canadian law and what happens now that the Catholic Church has denounced it.

What is the Doctrine of Discovery?

The Doctrine of Discovery is a series of 15th-century papal bulls, which are similar to public decrees or open letters that carry the political and spiritual weight of the Catholic Church.

The papal bulls, authored by Popes Nicholas V and Alexander VI, were penned during the mid- to late-1400s and often written directly to European monarchs looking to expand their empires. Many Indigenous critics and scholars point to them as the ideological framework for the moral and political supremacy espoused by European leaders, from Christopher Columbus to John A. Macdonald and beyond.

One famous bull is Inter Caetera, written in 1493 and published months after Columbus returned to Europe from his first full voyage. Inter Caetera is Latin for “among others,” which is the first phrase of the bull and sets the stage for colonizing missions to exist alongside other Christian practices of the time.

The bull intended to spread Christianity everywhere through a colonizing project led by the monarch of Spain while “securing the salvation of souls and subduing the barbarous nations and bringing them back to the faith itself.”

A similar bull written decades earlier called Romanus Pontifex became a basis for Portugal’s monarch to claim the “new world.”

How does the doctrine fit into Canadian law?

European countries’ claims to the so-called “new world” were justified through religious powers like the Vatican condoning their missions to conquer, proselytize and civilize Indigenous Peoples. That mission became ingrained in the laws of Canada, said Palframan, whose organization has released a course, titled Home on Native Land, delving into the historical and legal foundations of Canada.

In 1823, an American court case called Johnson v. McIntosh ruled that since the United States had won its war of independence against the British, Indigenous Peoples owned no land within its borders. The Supreme Court judge who ruled in the case based his decision on the Doctrine of Discovery, arguing that since European powers discovered the land, they owned it, with Indigenous Peoples only holding a “right of occupancy.”

Canada imported the same legal argument through the 1887 St. Catharines Milling decision, a battle for the land title between Ontario and Treaty 3 nations in northern Ontario. The decision found that the Crown, particularly the provinces, had ultimate discretion over Indigenous lands. It asserted Crown sovereignty over all lands within a treaty save for reservations, which only compose 0.36 per cent of land in Canada. The decision was based on the Doctrine of Discovery.

What happens next?

The Vatican missed the opportunity to reconcile in action by returning some of their assets and property in Canada, which are worth $3.3 billion, to Indigenous Peoples, Palframan says.

The Pope also fumbled the chance “to talk about the land back movement and look on a sort of diocese-by-diocese basis on how they could put reconciliation into action,” she said.

Pope Francis could have also called upon governments to repudiate the Doctrine of Discovery within the legal frameworks of colonial countries like Canada and Australia, Palframan added.

“If it was these colonial powers in the first place that did the very un-Catholic work of twisting the doctrine and manipulating it, then it should be the very same colonial powers that should be called upon ... to untwist our laws from it,” she said.

Palframan recognizes the difficulty of untwisting. Crown sovereignty is asserted in every province and will continue to be an issue as mining development explodes due to the federal government’s Critical Minerals Strategy, which seeks to expand Canada’s critical mineral supply of metals like lithium, copper and nickel needed for the energy transition.

This could set up legal battles with First Nations, she says.

Crown sovereignty is already a source of dispute in some resource projects on Indigenous land, sparking acts of civil disobedience such as the resistance of Wet’suwet’en hereditary leaders in northern B.C., who oppose the construction of a natural gas pipeline across their traditional territory.

“What the Supreme Court is trying to grapple with is the whole project of reconciliation… How can we hold onto Crown sovereignty while respecting Indigenous rights?” she asked

“How can we keep building pipelines, mining and practicing business as usual but just offer Indigenous Peoples this tokenistic participation?”

Comments