UNDER THE NORTHERN SKY: For My Brother Philip

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Under the Northern Sky
Under the Northern Sky Image: depositphotos.com

by Xavier Kataquapit
www.underthenorthernsky.com

I’m dedicating this column to my late brother Philip Kataquapit who passed away on Christmas Day in 1990 at the age of 16.

Philip Kataquapit
Philip Kataquapit

Philip was a very charismatic character. Everyone loved him and wanted to be around him. I always felt that he was a great combination of so many characters in our family all rolled up in one person. He was handsome, slender and tall like the men in mom’s side of the family. He was exciting, quick witted, funny and ready to laugh like dad’s side of the family. Guys wanted to be his friend because he was so easy to be with. Girls hovered around him because he was a handsome confident young man.

He was well connected with our traditional culture as dad had often taken him out hunting, trapping and fishing from the time he was really young. He was the youngest out of my four older brothers with Lawrence being the eldest, then Mario, then Anthony and lastly Philip. Myself and my younger brothers Joseph and Paul always looked up to our older siblings as being real traditional hunters who knew how to survive on the land.

Philip was theatrical and sensitive and could easily send my mom Susan and my sisters Jackie and Janie into fits of laughter. He was the type of boy that lit up the room when he walked in.

Whenever I think of him I see him in so many different ways. He will always be my older brother so I always see him as wiser and smarter than me. Now 34 years later, I think more and more of him as a young 16 year old that was getting ready for the world.

Like all our Christmases when I was growing up, 1990 was a chaotic dysfunctional mess of activity. Philip took part in it all as a teenager and like many of us, unaware of the dangers surrounding us in the middle of the wilderness in freezing weather. In the midst of party time Christmas culture, Philip innocently grabbed a snowmachine on Christmas Eve to visit his friends in Kashechewan, 90 kilometers away to the south. The winter road was still a very rough road back then but it was a path that he had gone on with our dad several times.

He left the community on his own with the confidence he had been taught about living on the land but he was unprepared and ill equipped for this freezing ride. He ran out of fuel a third of the way and ended up near the Kapiskau River which dad had taken him and my brothers hunting to years before. He knew there were hunting cabins nearby so he made his way there to shelter himself from the cold. He arrived at the cabins with nothing and no way to keep warm.

Christmas Day in 1990 arrived without Philip and my parents and family were worried but they thought he must be overnighting at a friends home nearby in town. It didn’t take long for everyone to sound the alarm that he was missing and search parties started wandering the community at first and then fanned out further. They found his abandoned snowmachine a day later and soon after discovered his final resting place at the hunting camp.

I was only 14 years of age and suddenly my life had taken a dark turn and everything was just a blur in time. I was numbed to the point that all I could do was carry on but with a sadness and guilt that tore at me. My entire family changed that day, however thankfully my mom Susan and my dad Marius were comforted by the fact that our family swelled with dozens of grandchildren. This made things easier although Christmas had become a day of a bizarre mix of joy and deep sadness.

My siblings and I will never forget our brother Philip. So many of our family, cousins, friends and relatives all along the James Bay coast will never forget him. He was loved by so many people in the short time he was with us. My brother’s memory and so many other tragedies that my family and others have had to endure this time of year is the reason why I am always adamant about reminding everyone of the dangers of addictions, alcoholism or abuse and taking risks in the freezing cold. What seems like casual partying can take tragic turns when young people take risks. These days I worry about all of those teens as I realize the risk that one little pill laced with a tiny amount of fentynol can easily kill.

I wish everyone a Merry Christmas but with the memory of my late amazing and kind brother Philip, I urge everyone to be easy with each other and watch out for one another during this festive but chaotic time of the year.

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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.