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There Is No Place for Sympathy Here

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A compelling Canadian legal history that examines the reasoning behind a striking array of verdicts – none for murder – in the suspicious deaths of nine people in 1941 in the Belcher Islands.
  • 27 October 2026
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In January 1941 the Royal Canadian Mounted Police learned of nine deaths in the Belcher Islands, an archipelago in southeast Hudson Bay. The fatalities reportedly occurred during an episode of intense religious fervour among the nomadic Inuit. While the RCMP ultimately charged seven Inuit with murder, none were convicted of that offence. In an era when murder demanded the death penalty and in a place that necessitated days of travel to reach, these legal proceedings illuminate the complex intersection of Inuit society and Canadian legal authority.

In this compelling history David Berg examines the coordinated roles of multiple branches of government in investigating and prosecuting the alleged murders, with the trial itself – conducted in a tent – serving as the book’s central focus. Despite overwhelming evidence, Berg’s extensive research demonstrates that the judge and counsel shaped the proceedings to foreclose the possibility of conviction by jury for murder. Although the judge insisted that “there is no place for sympathy here,” the record reveals a deliberate effort to avoid what all involved regarded as a legal but unjust outcome: the execution of the Inuit defendants. The result was a striking array of verdicts – one acquittal; four convictions for manslaughter; one finding of not guilty by reason of temporary insanity, a verdict not recognized in Canadian law at the time; and a declaration of unfitness to stand trial despite psychiatric evidence to the contrary.

Shedding light on the conduct and reasoning at work in the Belcher Islands trials, Berg offers vital insight into the relationship between Indigenous communities and the Canadian criminal justice system at an early point in its history.

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Price: $34.95
Pages: 264
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 27 October 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780228028826
Format: Paperback
BISACs: HISTORY / Canada / Provincial, Territorial & Local / Northern Territories (NT, NU, YT), HISTORY / Indigenous / Colonial History & Interaction with Nations, Tribes, Bands & Communities, LAW / Legal History
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David Berg is a justice of the Ontario Court of Justice and former defence counsel in Ontario and Nunavut.