This work by authors Jerry Fontaine (Makwa Ogimaa) and Don McCaskill (Ka-pi-ta-aht) gives insight into the evolution of the resistance against colonization within Canadian society, and speaks to the resilience of the Canada's Anishinabe communites in their ongoing efforts towards empowerment and agency over the past fifty years.
Canada, much like the United States, has a complex history of race relations between tribal citizens and the dominant white culture. Although much work has been put into reconciliation and healing of the injustices commited upon indigenous people, it has often been done through Westernized and Institutionalized systemic means, with the pacing often set by the dominant societal powers, and the struggles associated with ensuring continual progress in these efforts being placed primarily upon indigenous groups. This book centralizes the importance storytelling, the power of sharing personal experience, emphasizes the importance of staying true to indigenous values, gives personalized accounts of the power of ceremony, recounts the importance of language, and provides deeper clarity and insight into indigenous ways of being and knowing.
Detailing the political, social, cultural, and academic aspects of the struggle for indigenous rights in Canadian society over the past 50 years, it gives a framework for progress towards restoration and revitalization of a culture that was instituationally decimated through genocide, residential schools, and forced assimilation. Despite the legacy of colonialism, violence, and injustice, along with the numerous struggles faced by indigenous communities, this book paints an inspirational picture for work that could be done in the United States someday.
As an Anishinabe man, who is deeply passionate about his culture and cultural identity, who would like to be a part of a positive legacy of change, this book spoke truth to power for me; it made me proud to be indigenous.
I may not yet know the language, I may be working on deepening my understanding of the culture, I may not yet have found a community of activists within which I can help facilitate these changes, but this book provides a framework to show how this is possible.
With the current American political administration making the struggle for progress, truth, healing, and empowerment in minority communities more relevant now than any time since the American Civil Rights Movement, this book gives me hope that my people can achieve equality, sovereignty, cultural restoration, and growth, and create a brighter future for American Indigenous communities.