First Nation Anthology

Kisisk�ciwan: Indigenous Voices from Where the River Flows SwiftlyKisisk�ciwan: Indigenous Voices from Where the River Flows Swiftly by Jesse Rae Archibald-Barber
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

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How much, do you, as an average person, from the United States, From Canada, from Australia, from South America, from the Caribbean , how much do you know about the Indiginous population? How much do you know of the people that originally lived on your land?

In California, in fourth grade, we are taught about the mission system, of the Spanish coming and making the Indiginous peoples into slaves, bringing them into the missions, because they have no other choice. But the stories all make it sound as though there are no more Native Americans left, as though the people that still live around you, are just history, and nothing more. We are not taught of the dependents of the Olhone, that still are here, and still have much to say.  We do not recognize them.

And so, when I went to a conferences, as a young stupid 20 something, I met my first Native American, that I knew of,  and asked her what blood she was, as though that was the way to ask her what her peoples were. She replied O positive to be snarky, and let me know that the way I was asking was wrong.

In the United States we have not acknowledge, as a country, all the wrong we have done to the Native population. We have not apologized. We have not brought things forward. The Native population is on the outskirts of our mind, only seen if we got to casinos on Trible land, or if we pass through a reservation.

But in Canada, they are trying, slowly, to try to acknowledge the wrongs done.

When I went to my daughter’s graduation, the procession was lead by a First Nations representative of the peoples that the land of the school had lived on. They had First Nations people speak at the commencement. It was an amazing thing to see and hear.

And that is why it is not that amazing that this book, kisiskâciwan, has come out, to chronically the writings of the First Nations people of the Saskatchewan area. The  Cree, Saulteaux, Nakoda, Dakota, Dene, and Metis cultures.

This is quite an ambitious tome, with so many voices, streatching form the 1800, and the time of the treaties, to present day.  There are so many things said, so many quotes, that I want to include them all, but I also want you, to know why you should read this as well.

Let us start start with Atakawinin (The Gambler), with a speech he made to the Hudson Bay Company about the wrongs that had been done to him.

When one Indian takes anything from  another, we call it staling, and when we wee the present we say pay us. It is the Company, I mean.

Lieut-Gov. Morris asks “What did the COmpany steal from you?

The earth, trees, grass, stones, all which I see with my eyes.

Atahkakohp (Star Blanket) has this to say about Tready Six, in a speech he gave:

Can we stop the power of the white man from spreading over the land like the grasshoppers that a loud the sky and then fall to consume very blade of grass and every leaf on the trees in their path? I think not.

Or this quote from Payipwat, when asked by Father Hugonard to be baptized:

Oh, no. I am only going to accept half of your religion. I will belong half to the Christian religion and half to the Indian, because you may turn out to be wrong after all, and the Indian Regligion might happen to be right, and then I would have nothing to fall back upon.

And I can’t leave out this quote from Tatiana Iyotake (Sitting Bull)

I will remain what I am until I die, a hunter. And when there is no buffalo or other game, I will send my children to hunt prairie mice, for when an Indian is shut up in one place, his body becomes weak.

But this book is not just early quotes of First Nations peoples. There are quotes from the 20th and 21st century in as well.  There are folk tales, and legends retold. And there are excerpts from the likes of Maria Campbell, whose book Halfbreed, which was published in 1973, is considered the begging of modern Indigenous literature.

There is sadness, with stories of the Residency Schools, as well as children of First Nations peoples given to white parents, when the “60’s scoop happened”.

There is so much here, so much to read, and ponder, and then move on to the next selection. And since I have given early quotes, let me include some of the later quotes

Priscilla Sette has a wonderful  piece called The Strength of women: Ahkameyimowak.

Ahkameyimowak is a Cree word and embodies the strength the drives women’s o survive, flourish and work for change within their communities.

And then there is the journalist Merelda Fiddler, who writes in an essay called “Powerful Women, Powerful Stories: How I became Métis and a Journalist.

In this section of the essay she is trying to find out about a missing Indiginous woman, and her family.

“Why?” She asked. “Why would you want to tell that story? What do you hope to complain?” My answer not only convinced her, but also Boanniej’s most her and myself, that telling this story not only made sense, but was also desperately needed. The sad truth is Indigenous women’s re expect to go missing. They are expected to be victims of violence.

There are so many stories in this book. Each one a unique voice for their time. What the Universtiy of Regina has put together is simply amazing, and should be read by all, if for no other reason to see what colonization has done the Indiginous peoples.

Some Canadian Women You Should KNow

150 Fascinating Facts About Canadian Women150 Fascinating Facts About Canadian Women by Margie Wolfe
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Quickly, name three Canadian women. If you are not from Canada, do you even know three? You may know more than your think, and this book will introduce you to a whole lot more. Did you know Samantha Bee, of Full Frountal fame, is Canadian? Did you forget that K.D. Lang is Canadian? Did you remember that Buffy Sainte-Marie was?

Americans know who Rosa Parks was, but what about Viola Desmond, who would not give up her seat to a white patron in a movie theatre, and was arrested for that, and will soon have her image on the $10 bill.

And while readers might know that L.M. Montgomery wrote Anne of Green Gabeles, did you know that the book is so loved in Japan that a Japanese businessman once paid more than a million dollars for potatoes because they came from Prince Edward Island, where she lived.

It is a very short book, but very cool and can pique your interest in all these women, that you might end up reading a bio on any one of these 150 women.

Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review.

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Out in the Canadian Bush

Susanna Moodie: Roughing It in the BushSusanna Moodie: Roughing It in the Bush by Carol Shields
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I will start by saying that I have never heard of Susanna Moodie, but then I have not read nearly enough Canadian history. This shows me that I really should. I saw that Margaret Atwood had written the introduction, but I decided I needed no introduction, so plunged right into it.

Going in cold, without any background of Canadian history made this all the more intriguing. Susanna was born an aristocrat in the early part of the 19th century, int he UK. When her father dies, she has no money for a dowery, so must find a suiter who does not care about such things.. She, like most of the upper class, was not taught to take care of herself, or any domestic duties. She wanted to write, and did so. She ends up marrying a retired military officer, but finds that his pay will not support her, so decide to move to Canada, because it is cheaper there. She and her husband are not told that they are really moving into the wilderness, and they will have to do everything early settlers have to do for themselves.

And example of the protagonist at the beginning of the story.

Where she comes from photo Screen Shot 2016-03-07 at 1.39.38 PM_zpsxgjkg1lv.png

And how she looks after she have moved to the “bush”, and lived there for a while:

A vistor pays a call photo Screen Shot 2016-03-07 at 1.41.49 PM_zpsrsjbxhan.png

This reminds me a little bit of The First Four Years, but Laura Engles Wilder, but Laura grew up in the wilderness, and did know how to do things, like milk cows, and bake bread. Susanna had no clue how to cook, or do any of these things. And she has to learn, and learn quickly. She does make friends with the local First Nation people, as well as a man of color, who sells her a cow, so she can have milk.

Life is not easy, but Susanna goes into it determined, and it is an interesting transformation. The story follows her life from when she is a young woman to when she is an elderly woman. Through it all she has a sense of humor, and strives on.

Apparently, according to the prolog of the book, this was originally going to be a movie, but it never got made. And once I read that, and saw Margaret Atwood mentioned again, I decided to read the introduction, and learned how important Susanna Moodie was to Margaret, and why she wrote a poem about her, and how others have brought her up in their works.

I really enjoyed reading this. It makes me want to read the original book. It makes me want to read more about Canadian History. It makes me realize how ignorant I am of women writers in the 19th century.

I would highly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in Canadian History, interested in Women’s history, interested in writings about what it was really like to live in the bush.

My only problem with this book, and the reason it does not get the final star is that the illustrations sometimes go “off-model” and look wrong, or the poses would look ackward. It is a minor thing, but bugged me.

Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review.

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Horrors of Residency school in a picture book

I Am Not a NumberI Am Not a Number by Jenny Kay Dupuis
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is an amazing book. It is written simply and too the point, based on the life of the author’s grandmother.

In the United State, Australia, and Canada, and perhaps other places as well, the Indigenous people were removed from their homes and families and forced to become “white”. They were forbidden to speak their native tongue, forbidden to eat their food, and forbidden to have any contact with their families.

The author’s grandmother was one such child in 1928, in Canada. She and her bothers were removed from their family and forced to speak English, and beaten when they did not. This did not just happen to a few children, and this did not just happen back in the olden days. The last of the residential schools closed in 1996!

Perfect book for teachers to discuss history. Perfect book for young children to read to understand what happened.

Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review.

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Journey of Reconciliation

Speaking Our Truth: A Journey of ReconciliationSpeaking Our Truth: A Journey of Reconciliation by Monique Gray Smith
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The horror that was the residential schools is explored in this book that talks about what happened and what can be done to reconcile all that has gone before, for previous generations, and existing generations, by talking to survivors of the residential school system, as well as with youths of today who are only now learning about this horrid history.

For thos who don’t know, the residential schools are schools where the Canadian government took children of First Nations’ people, by force, and put them in to schools where they had their hair cut, had their clothes taken away, as well as their language, which they were punished if the spoke. They were not allowed home, except the summer, and sometimes not even then. this went on for generations. This distoryed families, for many generations, as well as obliterated the structure of the First Nations peoples.

Good book for those who want a thorough overview of what can be done, and what has been done, and what needs to be done.

Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review.

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When words are stolen

Stolen WordsStolen Words by Melanie Florence
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

With tears still in my eyes after reading, this I want to get my feelings down about this sweet, short picture book. So simple, only 13 pages long, but with such impact, I might as well as read a whole novel.

A little girl comes home from school and asks her grandfather how to say grandfather in Cree, since they are of those people. Alas, her grandfather has lost all his words, because he was forbidden to speak them when he went to residential school. He explains this in such simple ways, but gets the idea across:

“[They took me] away to a school that was cold and lonely, where angry white faces raised their voices and their hands when we used our words,” he answered. “They took our words and locked them away, punished us until we forgot them, until we sounded like them.”

Such a powerful way to explain what happened, with lovely pictures, the words becoming a cadged bird as they flew from their mouths.

Is this book relevant? Damn right it is. Is this book needed? Damn right it is. Does this book made you cry and rage at the same time. Damn right it does.

With stories in the news such as this one, where a senator says that residential schools weren’t all bad? Sheesh, we need a whole boat load of books like this.

Highly, highly recommend this book to all libraries, homes, and schools, both in Canada, and the US. This history needs to be told, and told again.

Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review. Thank you Second Story Press for publishing these, and other important books.

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The horror of Residential schools in a picture book

When We Were AloneWhen We Were Alone by David Alexander Robertson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is a quiet picture book, that sneaks up on you. There are two levels here, one of a young child asking her grandmother, her kókom, why she does things the way she does. Why does she dress in bright colors, why does she wear a long braid, why does she speak in Cree?

And very simply, her kókom explains about the residential schools where these things were all forbidden.

The residential schools were a horrid part of history, and it is important for children, and adults, to realize that real people were hurt by this policy, and its legacy. It is so good that publishers are coming out with stories to tell about this, and being written by Indigenous people as well, as who better to tell their own story.

Highly recommend this book as a beautiful picture book for libraries, schools, and home libraries. This author has also been doing graphic novels of First Nation history, which are amazing as well.

Brovo to High Water Press for this, and other books they have been brining out about the First Nation experience.

Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review.

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Things you should know about Indiginous people

Indigenous Writes: A Guide to First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Issues in Canada (The Debwe Series)Indigenous Writes: A Guide to First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Issues in Canada by Chelsea Vowel
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What is an “American Indian”? Seems like an easy enough question. And I am sure we all have an idea in our mind.

And we are probably all wrong.

This book. This book should be read by everyone. It should be read by Canadians. It should be read by Americans. The rest of the world can read it too, if they want. The point is, this book breaks down and explains to the “settlers”, to the children of colonialists, to the non-indigenous what Indigenous peoples are. And as Chelsea says:

The Canadian government basically takes the position that “you’re an Indian if we say you’re an Indian”

You would think that you might not need a whole book about First Nation people. How could Chelsea have that much to say, but she does, and there is that much. Because we aren’t educated in Indigenous history. If we are taught about Indians at all, at least in American schools, it is as a part of history, as though they were all removed from modern times. As one Native American told me, it makes him feel invisible, as though he is not standing there.

Chelsea has a wry sense of humor and although she is educating, she is also entertaining. Her main sections are Terminology of Relationship (about who are Indians), Culture and Identity (what it says on the tin), Myth Busting (all the things you thought you knew about Indians, such as that they got free housing, that they are more susceptible to being drunk and that they don’t have to pay taxes, to name a few), State Violence (where she discusses Residency School, and forced fostering out of Native children to non Native families), and Land, Learning, Law and Treaties.

And if you are this point, rolling your eyes, and saying, oh, that sounds boring, it isn’t.

The author likes to pull out interesting facts such as:

…from 1941 to 1978, Inuit were forced to weare”Eskimo” identification discs similar to dog tags. This was for ease of colonial administration, as the bureaucrats had difficulty pronousing Inuit names, and the Inuit, at this time, did not have surnames. For a while, Inuit were officially defined as “one to whom an identification disc has been issued.

She also has some comments on how Indians are defined by their blood.

The idea that Indian blood has some sort of magic quality that imbues one with legitimate Indigenous culture is as ridiculous a notion as I can think of, and so is the idea that “outside” blood can dilute or destroy Indigenous culture.

This is such an important book. I do hope that others read it, and perhaps get some idea of what the Indigenous peoples have gone through. There has been and still is so much prejudice against them, and such unfairness. It is important that they speak out, are published, and well read. We could all stand to have a little education.

Thanks to Netgalley, and Highwater Press for making this book available for an honest review.

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Historical Canada

Canada Year by YearCanada Year by Year by Elizabeth MacLeod
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Quick, if you are not Canadian, how much Canadian history can you tell me? And you can’t go look up old Kate Beaton’s Hark, A Vigilant cartoons either.

As an American, other than what I have learned from reading Kate Beaton, and reading on my own, I found that I really didn’t have much Canadian history under my belt. And did all you non-Canadian’s know that next year will be the 150th anniversary of their founding?

This is a very assessable little volume. It is not overly preachy, nor does it talk down to you. The author has picked one event per year to highlight, including nobel prize winners, olympic champions, and inventions. Nor does it shy away from issues such as the treatment of the First Nation people. The founding of the Indian act is mentioned, as well as the Residential schools apology. We learn who the first provinces who made up Canada were, as well as that Nunavut is the most recent province formed.

Highly recommended for just about everyone. Written at a middle-school to high school level, with great illustrations.

Thanks to Netgalley and Kids Can Press for making this book available for an honest review.

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