Opinion: The path to reconciliation can start by reading some good books

Glacier FarmMedia – Sept. 30 marks the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, a day meant to honour the children who never returned home and the survivors of residential schools, as well as their families and communities. 

Many people haven’t learned the history of residential schools because it wasn’t part of school curricula until recently and was seldom talked about.

I’ve met many people who were angry when they first started learning about this history. I firmly believe knowledge is power, and by reading or listening to stories by Indigenous people, everyone can learn these histories and start to work toward reconciliation. 

I’ve long had an interest in this area, so I would like to recommend some books I’ve read by Indigenous writers. 

David A. Robertson is a member of the Swampy Cree Nation who now lives in Winnipeg.

In his memoir, Black Water, Robertson travels with his father, Don, back to the family trapline.

Don grew up on the trapline before he was taken to a residential school. In a personal, emotional memoir, Robertson learns about his father’s history and how it affected his own family life.

Robertson has also written several books for children, and his picture book When we were alone can be used to teach children about some of the impact of residential schools, in a tone appropriate for younger people. This book is beautifully illustrated by writer/illustrator Julie Flett, a Cree/Métis author. 

For those who prefer to read fiction, I recommend Michelle Good’s debut novel Five Little Indians.

Good, who is of Cree ancestry, is a poet and lawyer and has spent part of her career advocating for residential school survivors. Five Little Indians follows five teenagers as they leave residential school and try to make their way in the world.

Some of the characters end up living in the bush, while others struggle on the streets of Vancouver. It is a powerful novel with fully realized characters who display how residential school has affected them. This book is a national bestseller, and a finalist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, one of Canada’s biggest literary accolades. 

They Called Me Number One is a memoir written by Chief Bev Sellars of the Xatsull First Nation.

Sellars recalls her years at St. Joseph’s Mission School in Williams Lake, B.C., and how she, her mother and her grandmother were all affected by attending residential schools.

The title describes a practice used at St. Joseph’s Mission School. Instead of being called by their names, the children were given numbers and Sellars was referred to as “number one.” In this book, she details the suffering she experienced and its impact on her mental health and family. She also outlines her own path to healing.

I have met people who feel overwhelmed when it comes to Indigenous issues, so if you want to learn some basics about Indigenous issues in Canada, I have two suggestions.

First, I recommend Chelsea Vowel’s first book Indigenous Writes.

Vowel is a Métis woman from the Lac Ste. Anne area in Alberta. Indigenous Writes is an excellent primer for understanding Indigenous issues in Canada. It’s written in plain language with a healthy dose of snark.

This book will change and challenge your assumptions about First Nations, Métis and Inuit issues, dispel myths and explain things in a way that is relatively easy to follow. Vowel explains things like “the Sixties Scoop,” “blood quantum” and how Indigenous people are taxed. 

Thomas King’s The Inconvenient Indian is another book that examines what it means to be Indigenous in Canada.

King is a celebrated novelist, children’s writer and mystery writer of Cherokee and Greek descent. This book looks at the relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people and delves into how Indigenous people are portrayed in pop culture. 

The National Day for Truth and Reconciliation is just one day, but it is a call to action for everyone.

And for some, that action can start by picking up a book or two, reading, and learning more.

– This article was originally published at the Alberta Farmer Express.

Source: Farmtario.com

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