Wabanakwut Kinew is an amazing Anishinaabe man, a musician, journalist, a chief, and now an MLA in Manitoba, and leader of the opposition. His late father was a North Western Ontario chief.
He also writes of his own reconciliation with his father, after they came to terms with life. He and his father, and his family, have been to Sundance Festivals and he writes of these experiences. The most interesting part of his life was working on an app to translate verbs. A project he and his father shared to support linguistic revitalization.
Northern Ontario elk |
"...it was apparent that things were getting better. A generation ago, education had been the tool of oppression used to hold us down. Now it was the tool of empowerment, and we were using it to lift ourselves up."Kinew writes of a fast and vision quest that takes place in Agawa, at Lake Superior Provincial Park. We visited there.
He writes of Mishi Pizhiw, and it is a fascinating legend from a deep and rich culture. It is an amazing journey of a brilliant young man.
Mishi Pizhiw |
A moving story of father-son reconciliation told by a charismatic aboriginal star. When his father was given a diagnosis of terminal cancer, Winnipeg broadcaster and musician Wab Kinew decided to spend a year reconnecting with the accomplished but distant aboriginal man who’d raised him.
His father was a chief in NW Ontario.
Wabanakwut Kinew MLA, better known as Wab Kinew, is the Leader of the Manitoba New Democratic Party and Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. Wikipedia
Then, there is Jeremy Dutcher...but that may be a whole other chapter.
Dutcher, another Indigenous man, managed to get his hands on his Maliseet ancestors' vocal recordings. His album is amazing.
The album art is based on an old photograph.
The image is based on an archival 1916 photo, in which Blackfoot chief Ninna-Stako sits, speaking into the trumpet-like recorder, with ethnographer Frances Densmore. |
Jeremy Dutcher is a classically trained operatic tenor, composer, activist, and musicologist who takes every opportunity to blend his Wolastoq First Nation roots into the music he creates, blending distinct musical aesthetics that shape-shift between classical, traditional, and pop to form something entirely new.JEREMY DUTCHER ONLINE:
WEBSITE | TWITTER | FACEBOOK
5 comments:
I read one of his other books but I can't remember which one it was.
Thank you for reviewing and for including the video links. I ordered a book about residential schools, but haven't read it yet. My TBR pile is seriously out of control. :)
Thanks for pointing out his work. I hadn't heard his full first name used before.
I bookmarked it online for purchase. Thanks for letting us know about it. - Margy
That is a powerful and empowering true story. Thanks for reviewing his memoir.
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