We Shall Remember – Under the Northern Sky

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Lest We Forget
Fort William First Nation holds a ceremony today to honour veterans who have served and fought.

We Shall Remember
by Xavier Kataquapit
www.underthenorthernsky.com

Every year many of us gather at the local city and town cenotaphs to remember the sacrifice of the men and women who fought in past wars. Many thousands were killed in battle, many more wounded and they returned to their communities after war but things were not the same.

My great-grandfather John Chookomolin and my grandfather James Kataquapit were part of a group of 24 young Cree men from Attawapiskat that were stolen away in the summer of 1917 by a military representative of Canada to fight in the first world war. They could not speak English, none of them had ever ventured to towns and cities in the south and they had no idea what this war was all about. They were traditional Cree men in their 20s, some had families and the only life they knew was living on the land. Annually they would come to the shores of the Attawapiskat River where the missionaries had build a church and where there was a trading post. Much of the time they were out on the land, hunting, fishing and gathering food so that they and their families could survive.

It upsets me to think about how much of a shock it would have been to accompany this army recruiter by canoe down the James Bay coast, into the Albany River and towards the Pagwa River rail station where the group caught a train to points south. The young group would have marvelled at the newly built iron railway which had been recently completed just five years before. They would have been very confused as they travelled to army training centres in the south to be introduced to the idea of world war, which would not have made any sense to them.

As time went on they would have realized that they were not appreciated in many ways and they would have discovered they were viewed as less than fully human. They would understand what racism was and what position they held in the firing line. This would have been very difficult for these young men who knew little of the colonizing Europeans who had come to their lands.

When they were transported to Halifax and boarded a huge iron ship these Cree men would have wondered where on earth they were headed. My grandfather James recounted to us that once they saw the land disappear west of them, they thought they were never going home again. Inside their ship, they would have been in cramped quarters with hundreds of soldiers heading off to England.

Just think it would have been as though some alien appeared at your doorstep, took you from your family and friends, put you on a spaceship and transported you to another planet to perform some unknown task. It would have been terrorizing.

War has always been about the very wealthy wanting more power, more land and more resources. These evil people send us into conflict to take what they want and they convince young men and women to go forward to kill and be killed. The very wealthy that start these wars use patriotism and all kinds of fake reasons to convince people to go to war. The second world war came about as a result of the very wealthy in Europe and the west who had no intentions of sharing the wealth in what had become a popular movement of social democracy. They funded and supported fascist regimes headed by people like Hitler, Franco and Mussolini to name a few.

The crazy thing is that we never really learn from past wars and the push for fascism by the very wealthy who run this planet. Realize that less than 1% of the global population are billionaires and millionaires who control half the wealth in this world. They don’t like unions, they don’t like nationalization of resources, health care or education. They really don’t care about the average person and are more than willing to put us all under the heal of fascism. Many historians, political scientists and academics are warning us that there is a growing worldwide movement towards more fascist and authoritarian governments.

For all of our family members, friends, neighbours who have ever been driven to war we owe it to them to deny the rich and powerful to take control of our lives and install fascist right wing regimes. Many of those young Cree men who were stolen from their lands in Attawapiskat more than a hundred years ago did not come home, many who did were traumatized and had difficult lives. Let’s do our best to make sure we are not tricked into heading down dark fascist paths full of violence and war. We shall remember.

www.underthenorthernsky.com

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Xavier Kataquapit
Under The Northern Sky is the title of a popular Aboriginal news column written by First Nation writer, Xavier Kataquapit, who is originally from Attawapiskat Ontario on the James Bay coast. He has been writing the column since 1997 and it is is published regularly in newspapers across Canada. In addition to working as a First Nation columnist, his writing has been featured on various Canadian radio broadcast programs. Xavier writes about his experiences as a First Nation Cree person. He has provided much insight into the James Bay Cree in regards to his people’s culture and traditions. As a Cree writer, his stories tell of the people on the land in the area of Attawapiskat First Nation were he was born and raised.