
Last modified: 2017-05-12 by rob raeside
Keywords: oka | quebec | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
![[Oka flag]](../images/c/ca-qcoka.gif) image
by Ivan Sache, 20 March 2013
 image
by Ivan Sache, 20 March 2013See also:
The municipality of Oka (4,678 inhabitants in 2006; 6,721 ha) is located in 
MRC Deux-Montagnes, Region Laurentides.
Oka was founded in 1721 as 
Mission du Lac des Deux-Montagnes. The domain of Lac des Deux-Montagnes was 
granted by the King of France to the Society of Saint-Sulpice. The Sulpicians 
erected in 1740-1742 the Oka Calvary to evangelize the natives. Made of four 
oratories and three chapels, the Oka Calvary was in the 19th century the most 
important place of pilgrimage in the region of Montreal. The festival of the 
Exaltation of the Holy Cross attracted in 1889 some 30,000 pilgrims. The 
Notre-Dame du Lac Abbey was founded in 1881 by Trappist monks and closed on 28 
February 2009. The monks established the Oka Agricultural Institute, 
subsequently made a Faculty of Agriculture affiliated to the University of 
Montreal, and the School of Veterinary Medicine. The famous hen "Chantecler", 
registered in 1921, was bred by the monks, who also produced the Oka cheese, now 
manufactured by the Agropur dairy cooperative. When the local post office was 
inaugurated in 1867, the name of Mission du Lac des Deux-Montagnes, deemed too 
long, was changed for Oka, a tribute to the Algonquin chief Paul Oka ("Golden 
Fish"). The Municipality of Oka, established in 1874, was divided in 1917 into 
the Municipality of Partie Nord de l'Annonciation d'Oka, renamed in 1977 
Municipality of the Parish of Oka, and into the Municipality of the Village of 
Oka. The two entities were reunited in 1999 to form the Municipality of Oka.
http://www.municipalite.oka.qc.ca 
- Municipal website
Ivan 
Sache, 20 March 2013
Image prepared after a photo was contributed on 20 
September 2012 to Waymarking
http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WMFAMH_Le_drapeau_dOka_Qc 
Ivan 
Sache, 20 March 2013
The Municipal Council voted in early 2000 a Resolution prescribing the design 
of new arms for the new municipality of Oka. The arms were designed by André de 
Pagès, heraldist and art historian.
The arms are "Per fess, 1. A chief 
azure a mount tenné watered by a span of water azure fessy wavy argent a yellow 
walleye* natant or ensigned by three chapels argent port sable surmounted by a 
cross argent flanked sinister by a star argent, 2a. Vert a garb bound gules, 2b. 
Purpure a fleur-de-lis or." The shield is in French modern shape.
The 
chief azure represents the blue sky, serenity and purity. 
The two mounts 
recall the historical name of the place, "Deux-Montagnes" (French, Two 
Mountains). On the upper mountain stands the Calvary**, a sacred site inspired 
by Golgotha in Jerusalem, the place where Christ was crucified. Tenné [orange] 
is the colour of the rich and fertile soil.
The water span represents the 
lake (Lac des Deux Montagnes*** - Lake of the Two Mountains) that waters the 
region. 
The yellow walleye recalls an Algonquin chief named Oka (in 
Algonquin, Walleye), after whom the village of Notre-Dame de l'Annonciation was 
renamed Notre-Dame de l'Annonciation d'Oka, and eventually Oka. [Thus the fish 
makes the arms canting.]
The three chapels are the symbol of the settlement 
by a human, Christian community. 
The cross argent is a symbol of hope and 
humility. 
The ports represent the doors that allow pilgrims to enter and 
pray. Sable is a symbol of patience and firmness, in compliance 
with the 
Sulpician principles.
The star recalls the old name of the place as a symbol 
of the Annunciation, after the Mission du Lac des Deux Montagnes was renamed to 
Notre-Dame de l'Annonciation in 1786. The star reflects the merging of the 
former village municipality and parish municipality of Oka. Argent is a symbol 
of hope and renewal. The two former municipalities are also recalled by the 
division of the shield into two parts.
The garb is a symbol of the primary 
vocation of a part of the municipality, agriculture. Or represents abundant 
production. The red binding is a symbol of the farmer's fierce work and his 
commitment to cropping the land. Red is a symbol of the farmer's two great 
virtues: bravery and boldness, which are required to face the up and downs of 
natural environment. The green base is a symbol of land and abundance.
The 
fleur-de-lis is the symbol of royalty, recalling that the territory was once a 
royal concession. Or, the colour of the noblest metal, is a personification of 
the sun, of wealth, force and faith. Purpure represents the establishment of the 
religious rule and 
reflects the grace of God and of the world.
The 
motto, "Histoire, abondance sont ses récoltes" [History, Abundant are its 
Harvests] expresses the willingness that has fostered for centuries a community 
formed by two distinct races, which, in spite of some disagreements*****, never 
stopped growing together and to created the history of an ever renewed region. 
The motto represents also the eventful history of the colonization of the 
region, clearing, work awarded by prosperity and abundant harvests, and 
achievements; it represents the human being, his faith, courage, offspring, 
which are fundamental elements for his evolution and blooming within today and 
tomorrow's society.
The supporters are decorative attributes expressing 
historical and social features of the municipality of Oka. The branches of white 
pine with golden fruit ("cocottes") highlights the work accomplished by the 
inhabitants of Oka, who, from 1886 to 1915, planted some 100,000 pines and firs 
on the sandy mound standing north of the village. This plantation forms today 
the beautiful pinewood**** that crowns the rear part of the village and 
represents an ecological resource for the municipality. The peace pipe 
represents the relations maintained by the Amerindians and the White for the 
benefit of the two communities that have been living together in the region for 
long.
http://www.municipalite.oka.qc.ca/armoiries/ - Municipal website
*The 
yellow walleye (French, "doré jaune", lit. "yellow golden"; Latin, Sander 
vitreus) is commonly found in big lakes and rivers of Canada and of the 
northern part of the USA. The fish enjoys cool (13-21 °C), shallow (less than 15 
m in depth) water.
http://www.mffp.gouv.qc.ca/faune/peche/poissons/dore-jaune.jsp - Full 
description, Forêts, Faune et Parcs Québec
**The Oka Calvary, erected in 
1740-1742, is inscribed in the Quebec Heritage List. The Calvary is made of 
seven white chapels, four chapels were erected along a mountain trail 
representing the Way of the Cross, while another three were erected on the top 
of the hill.
http://www.patrimoine-culturel.gouv.qc.ca/rpcq/detail.do?methode=consulter&id=93537&type=bien 
- Répertoire du patrimoine du Québec
***Lac des Deux Montagnes (c. 150 
sq. km) is formed by Rivière des Outaouais. On his map drawn in 1612, the 
explorer Samuel de Champlain named it lac de Médicis, as a tribute to Regent 
Marie de Médicis (1573-1642), Henri IV's widow. On his next map, drawn in 1632, 
Champlain renamed the lake to Lac de Soissons, as a tribute to Charles de 
Bourbon (1566-1612), Count of Soissons and Lieutenant General of Nouvelle-France 
(1612)., who had appointed Champlain as his official representative in the 
colony. The lake appears under the name Lac des Deux-Montagnes on the map drawn 
by Franquelin in 1684, but the name must have been coined earlier, since the 
Jesuit father Antoine Dalmas used it in the report of an exploration made in 
1674. The exact location of the two mountains alluded in the name of the lake is 
a matter of conjecture. Some say that the two mountains are the two highest of 
the Oka hills, mont Bleu and Calvaire, while other believe that the two 
mountains are the Oka hills as a whole and Mont Rigaud, located across the lake.
http://www.toponymie.gouv.qc.ca/ct/ToposWeb/fiche.aspx?no_seq=18207 - 
Commission de toponylie Québec
****At the time, the village was nearly 
totally surrounded by a sand dune of 30-40 m in height, resulting from massive 
deforestation. In 1886, big rains caused the partial collapsing of the dune and 
sand reached the northernmost house of the village. Father Lefebvre, Superior of 
the mission, organized the reforestation of the dune. Today's pinewood, composed 
of c. 50,000 trees, is the oldest planted forest in North America.
http://la15nord.com/les-archives/5820-comment-fut-cree-la-pinede-doka - Le 
Quinze Nord, 27 January 2010
*****The main "disagreement' was the Oka 
Crisis, which broke out in summer 1990. Mohawk natives were transferred in the 
18th century from the Montreal Island to the domain of Lac des Deux Montagnes 
but they were never granted property rights. In 1840, the Sulpicians started to 
sell plots to European colonists, so that the Mohawk territory decreased and 
became extremely parcelled out. In the municipality of Oka, the Mohawk reserve 
of Kanesatake covered in 1990 some 828 ha, including 20 totally enclosed plots. 
Most plots, acquired by the federal government, had the status of Crown lands, 
thus property rights were still denied to the Mohawk.
A proposal of 
increasing the Oka golf course and building 60 houses on a plot claimed by the 
Mohawk caused the outbreak of the Oka crisis. On 11 March 1990, the Mohawk 
erected a symbolic barrier on the road heading to the gold course, subsequently 
transformed in a barricade preventing access to the road. On 11 July, the 
assault of the barricade by the Sûreté du Québec tuned into a shooting battle, 
during which Caporal Marcel Lemay was killed. The Mohawk erected another 
barricade on road No. 344. A few days later, Mohawk from the neighbouring 
Kahnawake reserve (Châteaugay) blocked the access to the Mercier bridge, used 
every day by 70,000 cars heading to Montreal. Four out of the five barricades 
were suppressed on 31 August and the bridge was eventually reopened to traffic 
on 6 September. The siege of Oka ended after 78 days and the surrender - and 
arrest - of dozens of Mohawk Warriors.
In the aftermath of the crisis, the 
federal government acquired the claimed plots to increase the Kanesatake 
reserve, which is still Crown land. The issue of the territorial limits of the 
reserve is still unresolved, since the maps produced by the federal government 
and the municipality of Oka are not strictly identical.
http://ici.radio-canada.ca/nouvelle/729265/crise-oka-carte-comprendre - 
Radio Canada, 10 July 2015
Ivan Sache, 17 April 2017