Wab Kinew

The Reason You Walk: A Book Review

The title of the book comes from an Anishinaabe travelling song used to close their gatherings in the Lake of the Woods country. It is sung from the perspective of the Creator singing to you:

“I have created you and therefore you walk, I am your motivation, I am that spark inside you call love, which animates you and allows you to live by Anishinaabe values, I am the destination at the end of your life that you are walking toward.”                        

Wab Kinew’s memoir is a tribute to his father and the effect residential life had on three generations; his grandfather, father and himself. It is also a story of reconciliation. Kinew begins his memoir with descriptions of his father’s early life. He was a happy youngster living at home with his family and relatives until that day when a man in a black robe came to the reservation to take him away to St. Mary’s Indian Residential School outside Kenora Ontario. Only after 60 years, from the vantage of old age did Wab Kinew’s father, Ndede, open up to his son about the abuse he suffered and the experience he had watching his young Indian friend being killed by a group of men, of his being raped and humiliated and being made to kneel at his father’s funeral when Indian custom dictated that he stand. These are very personal stories and knowing them makes the latter part of Ndede’s life all the more remarkable. The residential schools were a social experiment with the aim of “taking the Indian” out of the child which we now recognize as “Cultural Genocide”.

One of the worst legacies of the residentials schools was “the emotional, physical, and familial gulf confronting survivors who never learned how to parent their children.” Ndede overcame the pitfalls, surviving alcoholism, racism, a failed marriage and finally returning to his Indian roots. He was a traditional chief who married a non-Indian, Wab’s mother. In his memoir Wab relates his own struggle in his youth. He was a former rapper, immersed in alcoholism, drugs and spent time in jail. Then, finally taking responsibility for his life just as his father had, he became an academic, a hereditary chief, a journalist and a father. He worked for the CBC and has become an urban activist and has recently announced he is seeking a political life

When Ndede was diagnosed with cancer Wab left his work at the CBC to be with his father during the last months of his life. His sister also returned from Europe putting her doctoral studies on hold. During this time father and son worked on an Internet App for the Anishinaabe language. The bonding that took place between these two men is a heartwarming story. Both men worked at the university promoting courses in Indian Studies. When Ndede died there was a funeral service on the reserve and a memorial service in Winnipeg. It was attended by many dignitaries including Archbishop James Weisgerber who had been a friend, as well as many politicians, the premier, cabinet ministers, university colleagues, students, First Nations elders, and two former national chiefs. Forgiveness became Ndede’s way of finding peace. He had met Pope Benedict XVI in 2009 and was present at Kateri’s canonization in 2012 .

Both Wab and his father were Sundancers. This Indian Spiritual Ceremony had been outlawed in the USA in 1895 and in Canada in 1904. It did continue in secret and is now being recognized as a legitimate religious ceremony. Wab’s description of his own piercing on the last day of the four day ritual was fascinating to read. The memoir ends almost as a meditation on the meaning of life.

To be hurt, yet forgive, to do wrong, but forgive yourself, to depart from this world
leaving only love. This is the reason you walk
”.

This is a must read book that will help us to understand the way forward. Kinew wants us to realize that there are three groups at the conference table in Canada. The Federal, Provincial and First Nations Governments.                                                  

Guest blogger Janet Brisson

Book Review The Reason You Walk: Wab Kinew, Penquin Canada, 2015.

 

Listen Carefully; Care for Each Other; Tell a Powerful Story

Popular Canadians, Susan Aglukark and Wab Kinew were anchors around which the London Area Local Truth and Reconciliation members built their March 10th and 11th conference, “It Matters to Us: Transforming the Legacy of Residential Schools” held at Western University’s Faculty of Education.  This was a collaboration of Western’s Centre for Research & Education on Violence  Against Women & Children and Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada.

On Tuesday evening, following a traditional opening ritual with well-known elders Dan and Mary Lou Smoke and songs by Western’s Sisters of All Nations, the evening belonged to Susan Aglukark who impressed the enthusiastic crowd with the skillful intertwining of songs and stories about her challenging and unique journey from tiny Nunavut to success as a Juno award-winning recording artist. In addressing the sufferings of Native peoples as a result of residential schools, Susan advised, “If we can forgive enough to heal enough”, we can survive the terrors of life --- and even thrive!  On that note, 400 people rose to their feet and joined in a joyous traditional circle dance around the auditorium. It was a memorable evening.

Wednesday’s program featured workshops wherein five residential school survivors recounted their powerful experiences of residential school. The brave and honest sharing of their childhood days cut short by the Canadian government mandating them into regimented schools that drowned their spirits and dulled their senses, provided a serious look at the reality of life for residential school students. It left indelible scars for the rest of their lives. In all, there were over 133 residential schools in throughout Canada where children were confined (1920-1969) for over a century.

Also included during the conference, were workshops  such as the “Blanket Exercise”, “Faceless Doll Project”, “Reconciliation in the Watershed” and various other informative experiences.  All provided valuable information on the far reaching effects of the Canadian governments’ encroachment on the lives and the lands of Indigenous people.

Wab Kinew’s address was the highlight of the conference. A well-known Aboriginal rapper, author and now host of CBC’s “Canada Reads” program, Wab outlined the dreadful impact of residential school on his family throughout several generations. However, he pointed out that in spite of their overwhelming trials, the Aboriginal children who were ripped from their homes in the Canadian government’s attempt “to take the Indian out of the Indian”, displayed the amazing strength, wisdom and beauty of Indigenous people.

Wab commented that in spite of 100 years of enduring the horrors of residential schools and its catastrophic effects on generations of Indigenous people, presently there exists an Indigenous resurgence. Over 27,000 Aboriginals are in post-secondary institutions and the languages of the people are experiencing a growth spurt.  Increasingly, young Indigenous people are found in professional positions and in leadership roles with women leading the way. Furthermore, British Columbia boasts an Aboriginal male in provincial parliament.

From a dark period in Canadian history, a new story is emerging. This May’s official closing of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Ottawa will see the tabling of the written account of all that has happened to the Aboriginal people. This story will find its home in the University of Manitoba. As one sad chapter in Canadian history wanes, a new and fresh chapter is unfolding before our eyes. 

Jean Moylan CSJ