Article Origin
Volume
Issue
Year
Page 15
A new chapter was added to literary history in Saskatchewan when internationally renowned Metis writer Maria Campbell paid a visit to elementary and high school students in Lloydminster April 25.
Jose Stone, who teaches the new Saskatchewan Grade 12 English curriculum at Holy Rosary high school commented on the general excitement and enthusiasm generated by Campbell's visit.
"We worked for two years with Aboriginal liaison Mel Gervais to get Maria Campbell to come and speak to my students from the viewpoint of a writer and feel that she is an excellent representative of a Canadian, a Saskatchewan and especially a Metis author," said Stone.
After an early morning children's storytelling circle, Campbell spoke to an audience of sixty Grade 12 students at Holy Rosary high school, giving an oral presentation that held her audience spellbound.
In their Canadian literature course, the students had tackled Stories of the Road Allowance People, tales by the Metis and Cree, translated by Campbell.
The students fired off questions concerning the creative writing process, Campbell's personal inspiration and the Metis culture. Explaining her development as a writer, Campbell said she had been transported from total obscurity to overnight literary celebrity when she published Halfbreed in 1973, in the wake of Wounded Knee.
"It was a time in our history, from 1965 to 1970, when there was a whole Aboriginal movement happening in Canada. Indian and Metis people were organizing what have now become the Metis and Indian organizations across the country. A real militant time. Aboriginal people were saying, 'We are here and you need to learn from us,'" said Campbell.
"In 1982, Metis people were legally recognized as a people, so the word half breed was something many people were familiar with and which was used in a very derogatory manner. That's why I used it as a title.
By the time I reached Vancouver on tour, the book was doing very well, number one. Media asking me what I was going to write next. I had never planned on writing a book and since then I've published seven books in eight countries in five languages and produced thirty-five documentaries and a television series," she said.
"That book and that life sometimes seems like another world. I sometimes wonder about that young woman that I left behind , but she took me to a really good place. Halfbreed and the writing of it was a healing journey for me," said Campbell.
"It changed my life and took me to places I never though I would be. If anybody had told me forty years ago that I was going to be an international writer and film maker, I would have laughed," said Campbell.
The works of Maria Campbell have now become standard fare in Canadian literature.
"Teaching Halfbreed, my approach was to make my students see the difficulties that Native people face and to make them understand that we are responsible for our own individual choices, a message that came out loud and clear when we read her book," said Stone.
As part of their study of Campbell's work, Holy Rosary students created works of poetry, paintings and written essays.
In her interpretation of Road Allowance, Cree student Kayla Harper created a deeply symbolic work of art, a beautiful forest, brutally cut down, burnt and smoldering, but with tiny green saplings growing amid the charred ruins and desolation.
Jade Scutt, a Grade 12 student, commented on Campbell's personal introspection in Road Allowance.
"An incident in the book that interested me was the way Maria treated Sophie (an Elder) at the dance that one evening. Maria was very pretty with red hair and blue eyes and she said she didn't know whom this old Indian woman was and completely rejected her. For her whole life, Maria had been trying to understand why people discriminate against each other and yet turns around and does the same thing to Sophie. She cut down Sophie to make her feel lower than herself and make her own self feel better. uckily, Marie realizes what she is doing and feels bad, but has trouble admitting it," said Scutt.
"These are the kinds of responses that that are so positive for students, not judging people but finding them as human beings. Road Allowance is a book worth teaching, showing there is hope for everyone, regardless of race, background, difficulties or poverty," said Stone.
"Thirty years ago, in Manitoba, four fellow English teachers introduced the book Who Has Seen the Wind by W.O. Mitchell. We almost lost our jobs in 1969 because we dared to teach Canadian literature, something that was not British literature. Now we have a whole course of Canadian literature in Grade 12, everything from geographic facts right down to the many different cultures across Canada. Inuit stories, stories by Chief Dan George, Maria Campbell, W.O. Mitchell. Canadian content right across the board and a great way to introduce the kids to the concepts of Native writers, poets, playwrights, screenwriters, as part of the whole mosaic," said Stone.
War Party raps good health to Beaver Lake youth
Rob McKinley, Windspeaker Contributor, Beaver Lake First Nation Alberta
They're young, energetic, and they pack a powerful message through dance, music and words.
War Party is a group of young Aboriginal rap dancers from Hobbema who tour Alberta to provide a message of healthy lifestyles to young men and women.
For five hours, War Party entertained and educated the youth at Beaver Lake First Nation's Maria Munro Hall on April 27.
The message was simple, said Beaver Lake's youth recreation worker Dwayne Lameman.
"They educate as well as entertain, and because all the members of War Party are between the ages of 19 and 22, they are really in tune with the young crowds they meet."
Topics mentioned during the night included alcohol and drug awareness as well as gang violence and self-esteem building.
By bringing in the War Party group, Lameman said Beaver Lake is stepping up its efforts to bring awreness programs to the youth of the area.
"It is a good opportunity for us to educate the youth while giving them a good, fun and high energy concert," he said.
The crowd was small-about 40 young people-but they were appreciative of the lyrics and rythmic beat of the backing percussion.
In past weeks, War Party has performed in Goodfish Lake, Morley and the Fort McMurray First Nation.
Lameman said feedback from those shows helped make the decision to welcome the group to Beaver Lake.
"Everybody that talks about them is really excited about what they are doing," he said.
- 631 views