Ambitious publishing effort
By Suzanne Methot
Windspeaker Contributor
REVIEW
Ahtahkakoop: The Epic Account of a Plains Cree Head Chief, His
People, and Their Struggle for Survival 1816-1896
By Deanna Christensen
850 pages (hc), $49.95
Ahtahkakoop Publishing
Ahtahkakoop is an ambitious volume that presents, in minute
detail, the life story of Chief Ahtahkakoop (Starblanket) and,
by extension, the culture and history of the people in his community
and the events surrounding their move to a reserve at Sandy Lake,
Sask., after the signing of Treaty 6. The self-published book
is a joint project of the Ahtahkakoop Cree Nation and several
corporate and government sponsors.
Deanna Christensen, a former Moose Jaw Times Herald reporter
and information co-ordinator for both the University of Saskatchewan
and the University of Regina, has conducted an impressive amount
of research. The book, which took 14 years to complete, starts
with the Cree creation story. It ends at the period just after
treaty-making, filling the gaping hole that exists in almost
every Canadian history text (where Aboriginal people are talked
about at the beginning, usually in terms of the Bering Strait
theory or the fur trade, but then ignored until modern protests
and barricades).
The author combines oral history, written history and archival
research to offer details on everything, including the community's
role in the early fur trade and the war parties and horse raids
of Ahtahkakoop's boyhood, as well as the surrounding issues in
the Saskatchewan River country, such as the Métis uprising
and the signing of treaties 4 and 5.
Christensen also includes information about buffalo hunting (including
the last hunt in 1877), the community's conversion to Christianity,
the switch to farming, and schools both off- and on-reserve.
These and other details are woven into the book's central concern:
at 500 of the total 800-plus pages, the treaty process and the
settlement at Sandy Lake takes centre stage.
Unfortunately, there are some problems. Despite the fact that
the (female) author spoke with women Elders, there is blatant
sexism. Early in the book we are told that "[I]t was the
sacred stories told by the old men, passed down from generation
to generation, that formed the foundation upon which the children's
education was based." With that sentence, the role of old
women in a balanced, healthy community is erased. And except
for one lone example - and surprisingly, given that Cree is not
a gender-based language - helpers and guides are referred to
as "Old Man" spirits, as if the natural and spirit
worlds are not in balance, comprising both female and male. (One
wonders if the community's conversion to Christianity has influenced
traditional notions of balance and equity. The Anglican Diocese
of Saskatchewan is a big presence in this book.) Finally, although
this community traces its history back to a western migration
from the Great Lakes, from Ojibway/Midewin roots, other Cree
communities have much different origins. But this is not stated,
so readers might incorrectly understand the Ahtahkakoop story
as the history of all Cree.
These shortcomings do not derail the entire project, however.
The wide-ranging nature of the information - the construction
of ox carts used in the first geological survey, the dimensions
and architecture of the community's first European-style dwellings,
the biographies of everyone, including the half-breed treaty
interpreters and school teachers, to the community's longtime
Indian Agent, gives this book a varied focus that will appeal
to readers of every interest.
Ahtahkakoop contains enough bells and whistles to please any
historian or teacher: more than 100 pages of notes, a selected
bibliography, a complete index, a glossary of people, a guide
to Cree pronunciation, the first band treaty pay list, and the
complete text of Treaty 6. But it also defines words throughout
the text (such as "catechist" and "Union Jack")
so students can follow along. There are texts of speeches, maps,
archival photos and original art, including the pencil drawings
of gifted artist Ed Peekeekoot of the Ahtahkakoop First Nation.
The book's detail is never boring. Rather, it allows readers
to understand the massive change that colonization brought to
Native communities, and it shows that instead of buckling under
the force of that change, Aboriginal people met it with intelligence
and ingenuity.
Although suitable for the general reader, Ahtahkakoop will also
prove a useful resource for schools, teachers, researchers, and
students of Canadian and Aboriginal history. It's an informative
and engaging read.