Indian Horse is a novel about Saul Indian Horse, an Ojibway from Northern Ontario. He was raised by his grandmother in traditional ways, but at age eight he was forced to live at an Indian residential school.
Residential schools were funded by the Department of Indian Affairs and administered by churches. Their purpose was to expunge Indigenous ways and inculcate Canadian culture. Attendance for school age children was compulsory from 1894 until an unconscionable 1996 when the last closed.
Not only were Indigenous children ripped from their families during formative years, they were subjected to physical, emotional and sexual abuses, and too many died from harsh conditions and torture. The result is generations of First Nation peoples alienated from their culture and language, lacking education, and experiencing post-traumatic syndrome and racism.
Indian Horse takes us through this dark period through the eyes of Saul. The book opens with him telling the reader that he has been told he needs to tell the stories to understand where he is from and where he is going. As his story unfolds, we can feel his joy and sadness, his success and failure, his anguish and emergence from a blocked out horrific experience.
Canadians are going through a reconciliation process to "redress the legacy of residential schools." In 2008, then Prime Minister Harper issued an apology on behalf of the Canadian government. That same year the Truth and Reconciliation Commission was established to hear testimony. Their "Call to Action" was finally released in 2015.
A community traditional canoe carving reconciliation project. |
Towns like Powell River across Canada brought Settlers (non-Indigenous Canadians) and First Nation members together to have hard conversations and to develop a better understanding of the ramifications of racial prejudice and subjugation. As a Settler in my native U.S.A. and my Canadian home I personally have a lot of work to do to reconcile my life of white privilege with systemic racism.
Indian Horse was the "People's Choice" Award of Canada Reads and First Nations Community Reads winner in 2012. It's not an easy read, but the message is important especially now. I highly recommend Indian Horse and am looking forward to my next Richard Wagamese book.
Here's another book related to truth and reconciliation. Powell River is located on traditional land of the Tla'amin First Nation, a Coast Salish tribe. Written As I Remember It by elder Elsie Paul tells about this same period of time from a local perspective.
Raised by her grandparents and hidden from authorities during fall sweeps, she was forced to attend the Sechelt Residential School at age ten. He memoir includes Tla'amin Nation history from oral traditions to the present as her people move away from Indian Act control to a self-governing nation.
Both books are available online including Amazon. -- Margy
Thanks for the book review. Richard Wagamese was was an important indigenous writer and commentator. Sadly he left this earth too soon.
ReplyDeleteI only discovered his works a few years ago. He has a strong message for Canadians and others around the world. - Margy
DeleteI thought Indian Horse was such a good book. Not an easy book to read, but powerful and one that has stayed with me for the couple of years since I read it.
ReplyDeleteYes it was. And such an important message with all of the unmarked graves being revealed. - Margy
DeleteGood book review. Enjoy your weekend.
ReplyDeleteThank you for stopping by and commenting. - Margy
DeleteI shall put this on my list! I've read the Mike Martin books, after seeing reviews! I think it was your review, but I am getting old and senile!
ReplyDeleteTomorrow I'm reviewing another Richard Wagamese book. Not old and senile in my book. - Margy
DeleteThank you for bringing important attention to our native First Nations, cultures and people!
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome. It was also made into a film that you can find online. - Margy
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