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Indian Horse: A Novel
Indian Horse: A Novel
Indian Horse: A Novel
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Indian Horse: A Novel

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

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“This flawless novel is an epic tragedy graced with tendrils of hope . . . a powerful fictional illumination of a Native North American life.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune

Named a “Best Novel of the Decade” by Literary Hub
The Basis for the Award-Winning Movie

Saul Indian Horse is a child when his family retreats into the woods. Among the lakes and the cedars, they attempt to reconnect with half-forgotten traditions and hide from the authorities who have been kidnapping Ojibway youth. But when winter approaches, Saul loses everything: his brother, his parents, his beloved grandmother—and then his home itself.

Alone in the world and placed in a horrific boarding school, Saul is surrounded by violence and cruelty. At the urging of a priest, he finds a tentative salvation in hockey. Rising at dawn to practice alone, Saul proves determined and undeniably gifted. His intuition and vision are unmatched. His speed is remarkable. Together they open doors for him: away from the school, into an all-Ojibway amateur circuit, and finally within grasp of a professional career. Yet as Saul’s victories mount, so do the indignities and the taunts, the racism and the hatred—the harshness of a world that will never welcome him, tied inexorably to the sport he loves.

Spare and compact yet undeniably rich, Indian Horse is at once a heartbreaking account of a dark chapter in our history and a moving coming-of-age story.

“Shocking and alien, valuable and true . . . A master of empathy.” —Jane Smiley, Pulitzer Prize–winning author

“A wonderful coming-of-age novel.” —Outside Magazine

“Wagamese has sneakily written one of the great works of sport literature.” —Literary Hub

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 10, 2018
ISBN9781571319883
Indian Horse: A Novel
Author

Richard Wagamese

Richard Wagamese, an Ojibway from the Wabaseemoong First Nation in northwestern Ontario, was one of Canada's foremost writers. His acclaimed, bestselling novels included Indian Horse, which was a Canada Reads finalist, winner of the inaugural Burt Award for First Nations, Métis and Inuit Literature, and made into a feature film; and Medicine Walk. He was also the author of acclaimed memoirs, including For Joshua; One Native Life; and One Story, One Song, which won the George Ryga Award for Social Awareness in Literature; as well as a collection of personal reflections, Embers, which received the Bill Duthie Booksellers' Choice Award. He won numerous awards and recognition for his writing, including the National Aboriginal Achievement Award for Media and Communications, the Canada Council for the Arts Molson Prize, the Canada Reads People's Choice Award, and the Writers' Trust of Canada's Matt Cohen Award. Wagamese died on March 10, 2017, in Kamloops, BC.

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Rating: 4.350210861181435 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Waiting for others to discover this leading Canadian author. A rich storyteller who captures the emotional journey of a trouble native boy who destination to become a great hockey player is challenged by his past.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A CBC Canada Reads book, top 100 Globe and Mail listed, critically acclaimed, much discussed, Richard Wagamese's novel Indian Horse is deserving not only of accolades but your time. This is simply an excellent, fundamentally Canadian novel, beautifully and sparingly written, with grace, poise, banked passion and heartbreaking insight.Although a work of fiction, Wagamese draws from the lives of people he has known and lost, and because of that resonates with much earlier works by other great authors who wrote about similar struggles: John Howard Griffin's seminal work, Black Like Me, and even the now classic novel by Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird.Wagamese tells the story of Saul Indian Horse, from happy Ojibway boy in Canada's bush, to bitter urban man who is flotsam in the wreckage created by white oppression, residential school brutality and hypocritical Canadian society. But this is also a story of discovery, of hope, of healing. And should be required reading for every individual in this nation.Much of Saul's insight and struggle revolves around the boon and bane of hockey, which in essence becomes a metaphor for his life. His triumphs on the ice are the triumphs of his soul. His defeats and destruction at the hands of players and fans is his defeat in residential school, the logging camps and mines. The epiphany and vision he finds in hockey, is the epiphany and vision he finds for his own life. One universe coexists in tandem with the other. And all of this told in a highly readable and compelling manner.If you haven't already read Indian Horse I urge you to go out right now and purchase a copy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Saul Indian Horse has hit rock bottom and is in a treatment center for alcoholics. He isn’t one to speak in group, for fear of people not understanding, so he has finally decided to write down his story to heal. Indian Horse takes you on a journey of Saul’s life, the Ojibway tribe and how the government took the kids, hockey, and other moments leading up to him being in the treatment center. Filled with so many emotions – love, hope, fear, sorrow, despair, anger, etc. – Indian Horse is a novel that you won’t forget anytime soon.Overall an excellent read. I loved the parts about the Ojibway tribe but could have done with fewer hockey sections
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Such an excellent book but a distressing read. However, I'm really glad it was chosen as one of the finalists for Canada Reads. I might not have read it otherwise because it wasn't a book that I'd heard about.Saul Indian Horse is an Ojibway Indian growing up in North-Western Ontario. Two of his siblings have been taken away from the family and put in residential schools. Saul's grandmother is determined they won't get Saul. When Saul's brother runs away from the school she convinces the family to go upriver to Gods Lake. Saul's brother has contracted TB though and he dies. His parents decide to take him back to civilization to bury him the Christian way. Saul and the grandmother stay at the camp until it is almost frozen. They canoe back to Minaki in the bitter cold. Saul's grandmother dies holding him close and that is the last kindness he ever knows.He is taken to a residential school and witnesses unspeakable things. But one priest teaches him about hockey and it becomes his passion. In fact, hockey even gets him away from the school eventually because he is so good. He lives with an Ojibway family and plays on an Indian hockey team and goes to a real school. Then he is scouted for the NHL and goes to Toronto. The racism he faces takes away the joy he finds in the game. From then on his life goes downhill until he reaches rock bottom.Since the Truth and Reconciliation Committee has started hearings Canadians have learned a lot about what occurred at residential schools. I've felt guilt and sorrow and disgust as the truths have been told. However, I never felt like I was right there until I read this book. From what I can tell Wagamese didn't actually attend a residential school but he must know many people who have. Non-aboriginals should read this book if only to understand what it was like to live in residential schools. But there is a lot more to it than just that. The descriptions of the country, the people and the hockey games are amazing. And then the ending is like coming out of the dark into a warm lighted home.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The book is set mostly in the 1950s and 1960s. Residential schools were set up by Christian groups to rid the Indians of their language and culture. Saul Indian Horse is still a little boy when he loses his entire family and is taken to a residential school in Ontario. While there, he teaches himself to play hockey and loses himself in the game. He becomes an amazing player and hockey continues to be his life when a family “adopts” him into their home and brings him out of the residential school after 7 years there. The book follows Saul as he becomes an adult, and everything he goes through. To be honest, I wasn't completely sure what I would think of this book, but I was really impressed. This was really good. Hockey was an important part of the book, but I don't think you need to be a hockey fan to like the book. (I should add, though, that I used to be a big hockey fan, though it's been a long time since I've been interested.) There are sections of the book where the descriptions of the hockey do dominate, but I think there is enough of a story otherwise to keep even those who don't like hockey interested.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    In Indian Horse, Richard Wagamese recounts the life of a northern Ojibway, Saul Indian Horse, as he embarks on a healing journey to come to terms with the truth about his experience in a native residential school. His unbreakable bond with the land and his strong spiritual connections ultimately save him from alcoholism, but the abuse he suffered and the racism he endured have tainted all of his life experiences. Even his beloved hockey, which at first seems to save him from the residential school abuse, is in fact inextricably linked to it. It makes you ashamed to be a citizen of a country that inflicted this on their aboriginal people. A well-deserved people's-choice winner on 2013's Canada Reads.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A compelling read, at times heartbreaking and at other times up-lifting.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Richard Wagamese's novel, INDIAN HORSE, is an eye-opener, and one hell of a good story. Narrator Saul Indian Horse, a thirty-three year-old Canadian Native American (First Nation), is writing down his story as therapy, trying to come back from years of alcohol abuse. His life has been a mixture of the grim and glorious. The grimness stems from his being orphaned and abandoned as a child, followed by years of abuse as a resident of a Northern Ontario Indian School run by priests and nuns. The glory comes with his prowess and natural ability as a hockey player, which takes him from the rag-tag school team, through the Reserve and mill town bush leagues all the way up to a farm team for the Maple Leafs, where it all falls apart when Saul finds himself the target of hatred and racism. Quitting all of it he roams rootlessly for years, drowning it all in alcohol.Wagamese blends native culture and rituals with the influences of white civilization - mostly bad - and the hockey madness that Canada is famous for and creates a story that will grab you and keep you reading deep into the night.I had wanted to read this book ever since reading another book about hockey, also by a Canadian, Brian Fawcett's excellent THE LAST OF THE LUMBERMEN. I'm glad I finally did. The truth is I don't play hockey or even watch it, but both authors are good enough that I was mesmerized, and yes, a lot of both books are all about HOCKEY! INDIAN HORSE is a moving, eloquent and disturbing look at life in Canada's First Nation back in the 60s and 70s, and Saul Indian Horse is a character you will remember. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have never felt more Canadian or more guilty than during my read of Indian Horse a beautifully written novel by the Objibway writer, Richard Wagamese. The story of Saul Indian Horse is a disturbing, yet ultimately uplifting story that explores the impact of Canadian residential schools on generations of Aboriginal Canadians.These residential schools are a stain on my country’s history. While we celebrate our multiculturalism and openness to immigrants from around the world, we have only recently begun to recognize and identify the horrific impact of the forced abductions, wiping of cultural background and endless abuse that was inflicted on these children. When Saul was taken to St. Jerome’s, he entered a bleak, loveless world where the priests and nuns tried to remove his connections to family, culture and race. What saves Saul is the game of hockey and he puts his whole being into the game. A young priest, Father Lebouilier encourages his interest and Saul surprises everyone with his uncanny hockey skills. These skills lead to him being taken away from the school and bring him into the larger hockey world with a shot at making the NHL. Unfortunately, however, this was the hockey world of the 1960’s and Saul finds his inner rage building as the racial intolerance grows. Although Saul left the game behind, he could not shake off the deep anger inside himself and isn’t until years later, while he is working to overcome his addiction to alcohol that he is able to face the truth that he has been battling since childhood.Indian Horse is an excellent book, the story is simple and straightforward yet tells a story that speaks directly to the emotions of the reader. As Saul battles his demons the reader is given a clear picture of how the loss of home and culture had set him adrift. Although a work of fiction, the experiences that he writes about are the devastating truth, and reading of the horrors that trusted guardians put these these innocent children through brought me to tears. As a Canadian I felt guilty that we, as a nation, buried our heads in the sand and didn’t see what was plainly taking place. Indian Horse is one more testimonial to the heartbreaking legacy that the residential school system has left behind.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Definitely a book directed at Canadians.I knew that children were sent to Australia from British orphanages, I knew that Aboriginal children were separated from their families 'for their own good'. I knew that children of Irish mothers were 'rehomed' without trace. Now I discover that Canadian Indian children were also wrenched from their families and forced to live in barbaric schools. Here they learnt very little and were savagely beaten for minor infringements of the totally unrealistic rules. Their native language was banned and most of their days were spent in cleaning, farming or cooking, serving men and women who should never have been nuns or monks in the first place. Why is this becoming such a familiar scenario? Why are there so many evil people masquerading as Christians?Saul Indian Horse comes from a loving Ojibway family. His grandparents are from the 'old way' but his parents' generation are Christian, living as their ancestors had, but confused about what they believe. They are, however, determined that Saul and his brother Benjamin will not be stolen away like their elder sister, never to be seen again.Unfortunately, in spite of their best efforts, Saul finds himself at St Jerome's. Here he survives the loneliness and fear by totally engrossing himself in the game of ice hockey.This is where the Canadian readers in our book group continued to be engrossed, while the non-Canadians got lost in a continuous description of hockey jargon. I found myself skipping large chunks of detailed descriptions of hockey games, exciting twirls on the back of the blade and bouncing off backboards. It sounds like an horrifically violent sport, but I was totally out of my depth in these passages, which formed a large proportion of the book.This book had a strong message about survival and endurance and what it takes to overcome a traumatic childhood, and I would surely have been giving it 4 stars if it hadn't been so strongly biased towards ice hockey.Recommended reading for Canadians.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It is almost impossible if one lives in the United States to be unaware of our border crisis with Mexico. Children separated from their mothers, each sent to a different place, sometimes different states. This story takes place in the sixties and represents another time those in charge. In this case the Catholic Church, thought it was a good and necessary to take Indian children from their parents and wipe out their culture, enforce Christianity. Saul, Indian Horse is only eight when he is taken as and sent to St. Jeromes.Terrible place, where Christian mercy was here was not in evidence. The things they did to these young children, the things they endured. So hard to read, so horrible to contemplate. Why does this country, though this took place in Ottawa, it happened here too, do the same stupid things over and over, expect a different outcome. Believe that is the definition of insanity.Anyway in one way Saul is fortunate, he discovers and is good story hockey. It came with a high price, one we really don't understand until later in the book. Still, he carries many mental scars and as he grows older he can no longer shove them aside. This is his story, and it represents believe the story of many such young Indian children.Such a fantastic writer this author is, the words just flow with nary a stutter. Does help if you like hockey, but even if you don't Saul's story is worth reading. Injustices should always be acknowledged regardless of when they happened, of do I believe.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Canada Reads selection. This book should be mandatory reading for every Canadian; for every person who lives in a country they or their forefathers invaded and imposed their values,their "way of life" upon. Beautifully written book, haunting and rewarding. The reviews on Goodreads for this book are some of the most thoughtful I have seen for any book - and that is testament to how incredibly worthy this book is. Buy it, read it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Just finished this book today, and I honestly can't believe it was that good! I would never have chosen to even read this book if it wasn't chosen for my book club by someone else, but once I got into it, I could barely put it down. Some real tear jerking moments, and some very uplifting moments. Really wonderful, I'll be recommending it to everyone!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A wonderful book. Subtle, profound, deeply moving and beautifully written. It should be on everyone's reading list.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book left a bad taste in my mouth. But I suppose depicting life in a Residential School and other disturbing things it wasn't going to be a feel good type of story. But the theme of ice hockey brought back a lot of memories and made the time worthwhile.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    “One day the clouds hung low and light rain freckled the slate-grey water that peeled across our bow. The pellets of rain were warm and Benjamin and I caught them on our tongues as our grandmother laughed behind us. Our canoes skimmed along and as I watched the shoreline it seemed the land itself was in motion. The rocks lay lodged like hymns in the breast of it, and the trees bent upward in praise like crooked fingers. It was glorious. Ben felt it too. He looked at me with tears in his eyes, and I held his look a long time, drinking in the face of my brother.” (18)Book Description: from front coverSaul Indian Horse has hit bottom. His last binge almost killed him, and now he’s a reluctant resident in a treatment centre, surrounded by people he’s sure will never understand him. But Saul wants peace, and he grudgingly comes to see that he’ll find it only through telling his story. Beginning with his childhood on the land, he embarks on a journey back through his life as a northern Ojibway, with all its joys and sorrows.Author Richard Wagamese traces the decline of a culture and a cultural way with compassion and insight. For Saul, taken forcibly from his family when he’s sent to residential school, salvation comes for a while through his incredible gifts as a hockey player. But in the harsh realities of 1960s Canada, he battles obdurate racism and the spirit-destroying effects of cultural alienation and displacement.My Review:Wagamese’s Indian Horse was a gift from the Aboriginal Education Department of my local School District. And what a gift! The novel is one I didn’t want to put down, and, but for starting it late one evening, would have read in a single sitting. The story of Saul Indian Horse, and of the fate of his family, is at once tragic, heartbreaking, courageous, and victorious. Saul, having been taken into residential school at eight years old, manages well into his adulthood to see his way through the other side of his abusive experience, and to at last know peace. But the road to salvation was not a straight one or an easy one, plagued as it was by rage, isolation, desolation, and alcoholism. “They took me to St. Jerome’s Indian Residential School. I read once that there are holes in the universe that swallow all light, all bodies. St. Jerome’s took all the light from my world. Everything I knew vanished behind me with an audible swish, like the sound a moose makes disappearing into spruce.” (43)Wagamese writes with a powerful, raw honesty, not shying away from the realities of rape, starvation, beatings, and humiliation that plagued the school’s children; but neither using such details to garner effect. On a personal note, I believe the residential schools to be Canada’s greatest shame. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The narrator of this novel is Saul Indian Horse, a First Nations former hockey star undergoing treatment for alcoholism. In rehab he is encouraged to tell his story as a form of healing and so he writes what amounts to his autobiography. Saul is an Ojibway from northern Ontario; at the age of eight, in the early 1960s, he is placed in a government-sanctioned, church-run residential school where “There were no grades or examinations. The only test was our ability to endure.” There, like so many Native children, he experiences and/or witnesses beatings, rapes, and countless humiliations. He describes life at the school, the place which “took all the light from my world,” as hell on earth: “When your innocence is stripped from you, when your people are denigrated, when the family you came from is denounced and your tribal ways and rituals, are pronounced backward, primitive, savage, you come to see yourself as less than human. That is hell on earth, that sense of unworthiness. That’s what they inflicted on us.” What saves Saul is the game of hockey introduced to him by a young priest, a game for which Saul proves to have an almost preternatural understanding. His natural talent and determination to perfect his skills make a career in the sport a possibility, but as his opportunities increase so does the racism he faces. I know a bit about the abuse faced by children who were forcibly removed from their families and suffered physical, sexual, and emotional abuse in residential schools, but this is the first novel I have read written from the perspective of a survivor. It is the details of the abuse that are shocking, but it is their very specificity that adds credibility to this work of fiction. The author’s emotionally restrained style in which he avoids gratuitous details and an accusatory tone - and even remains polite - ensures that the reader cannot dismiss the novel as a bitter diatribe which exaggerates for the sake of effect.It is clear who bears responsibility for the abuse and its consequences for future generations, but Saul is also given some advice about healing: “’They scooped out our insides, Saul. We’re not responsible for that. We’re not responsible for what happened to us. None of us are. . . . But our healing – that’s up to us. That’s what saved me. Knowing it was my game.’”The one part of the book I did not enjoy is the descriptions of the many hockey games. I am not a fan of hockey (a blasphemous admission for a Canadian) and know little about it and so found my eyes glazing over in the sections detailing technicalities of the sport. It is not necessary to become tediously repetitive to make it obvious that hockey provides an escape Saul and that he is an exceptionally talented player. I will admit, however, that the use of Canada’s national game as a metaphor for Saul’s plight (and that of other aboriginal youth) is genius: a young man has the talent and work ethic to strive for the dream of Canadian youth – a shot at the National Hockey League – but the dream may be unattainable because of systemic racism.Stories are an integral part of Saul’s culture. One man tells Saul, “’Ojibways are the best storytellers I know’” although Saul thinks that his people have “stepped beyond the influence of our legends. That was a border my generation crossed, and we pine for a return.” But in rehab Saul is told that it is necessary for him to know and understand his story in order to heal his broken spirit. Likewise, it is necessary for all of us to know and understand our hiSTORY. I’m starting a list of should-read novels for all Canadians; in the First Nations category, I have thus far included "Three Day Road" by Joseph Boyden and "Incidents in the Life of Markus Paul" by David Adams Richards. "Indian Horse" now joins the list. It forces us to face the shameful part of our history in which it was not the victims of residential schools that were the savages.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Ojibway Saul Indian Horse is sent to St. Jerome's residential school in Northern Ontario when he is nine years old in the 1960s. His experience is lonely and troubled until he discovers his love and ability at ice hockey. He is encouraged to develop his talent by one of the priests. He has inherited a spiritual vision from his ancestors which allows him to anticipate plays and moves and excel beyond his wildest dreams. He moves to bigger and better teams and eventually to the Toronto Marlies. Along the way he encounters more challenges, in particular racism from white players and crowds. He eventually quits and begins drifting around and ends up as a drunk. When he hits rock bottom, he discovers the main reason for his rage and self loathing leads back to his residential school experience. His road to recovery begins when he acknowledges the sexual and physical abuse, racism his parents, friends and ancestors suffered and realizes that the only person who can get him out is himself. His journey realizes a very deep connection to his grandparents and other ancestors as well as a vital link to the natural world. He returns to his old friends the Kelly's and is on the road to recovery with a happy ending. I really enjoyed the story, the spirituality, the gentle humour and the prose of this book. It is very well written narrative of hope and belief in self determination.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Books that make an impact on you are few and far between but this book definitely hit the mark for me. I loved the writing, the imagery, the characters. Absolutely everything about it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Saul Indian Horse grew up in Northern Ontario. His story is one all too familiar to Canada's aboriginal people: he watched his brother and sister taken by force to residential schools; his parents were addicted to alcohol, and his beloved grandmother died before Saul could care for himself. He, too, was sent to residential school where he endured racism and abuse. Saul's life was changed by hockey. He could play like a superstar, with outstanding speed and skill. Hockey was his ticket out of residential school, and off the reserve. But Saul's demons won't let him be free from his past. This is his story of trying to rebuild his life.Well written, with an easy flow that makes the truth about Saul's past all the more horrifying. And yet, a ray of hope remains in Saul because of his strong character and the support of his community.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Saul Indian Horse is an Objiwe boy who grew up in the forests around the Ontario-Manitoba border. When he is 8 yrs old, he is forced into a residential school. Despite the brutality of his life, he learns to play hockey and is a talented athlete. Throughout his teens, he uses hockey as an escape from his horrors. Unfortunately, the racism he experiences from other players and fans sours him, and he ends up living a nomadic life doing temporary labour jobs and falling into alcoholism. By facing his demons, he overcomes and starts a new/old life.Indian Horse was defended in 2013 Canada Reads, and was nominated for the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.Why I Read This Now: book clubRecommended for: a broad audience and anyone who doesn't know about a black mark on Canada's history -- the residential school.Rating: Indian Horse is a solid "good read." It's compelling, very well written, and moves along thanks to short chapters. Personally for me there was way too much hockey, so I take off half a star for that. 3.5 stars.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Saul Indian Horse is just a young boy when he is taken to live in a residential school, a boarding school set up to force First Nations children to lose their native way of life. It's a brutal life where many don't survive, and those that do are broken, but Saul finds an outlet and escape in hockey, playing first with other boys from the school, but then moving on to the Native League and further. Richard Wagamese packs so much into this slender book, and does so with the assurance of a master at his craft. There's a real joy communicated as Saul plays hockey, and the harshness of his childhood is written about with a matter-of-factness that makes the abuse seem both routine and extraordinary. There's a grace to this harsh tale that will stay with me.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Since Richard Wagamese died, I've been torn between a) reading all of his books and b) saving them because I've just realized there will never be a new Richard Wagamese book and I can't bear the thought of running out of his books.

    So. A heartbreaking and disturbing look at residential schools, racism, and hockey. Indian Horse should be required reading for Canadians.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Sad story about a boy that attended a residential school in the Canadian North. What kept him alive was the game of hockey. He does come to terms about the abuse he suffered at the school but it was difficult to say the least. This is just the tip of the iceberg of what these pour children endured at these schools in the 50's and 60's.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A powerhouse of a book. It captures emotion, sensibility and loneliness all in one place. Very well done.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazing book. Even if you're not a hockey fan, you'll bleed and cheer and rage and love this boy Saul.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A complex story about a character that the reader becomes attached to. Indian Horse is abandoned by his family before he reaches age ten and is consigned to a Canadian ‘Indian School’ run by priests and nuns. He found the experience very unpleasant but in the end he gets interested in Ice Hockey and teaches himself to skate and use a hockey stick and becomes very good at hockey. He struggles to become accepted as a player because of his Indian background but in the end has a shot at a National Hockey League team. But he finds the taunting of his Indian background unbearable so he leaves the sport and becomes an alcoholic drifter. He is helped or rescued and gradually comes to terms tip his past even discovering a terrible secret from his past at the Indian school.I enjoyed the book very much and will surely read more of Wagamese’s work.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Reason Read: November Indigenous People/Native American I've wanted to read this one for several years now and this was the year. The story of Saul Indian Horse, Ojibwa, Canadian who was placed in one of the Catholic schools, played hockey, and in adult years he fought and overcame alcoholism. This is a heartbreaking story. The audio is excellent.

Book preview

Indian Horse - Richard Wagamese

1

My name is Saul Indian Horse. I am the son of Mary Mandamin and John Indian Horse. My grandfather was called Solomon so my name is the diminutive of his. My people are from the Fish Clan of the northern Ojibway, the Anishinabeg, we call ourselves. We made our home in the territories along the Winnipeg River, where the river opens wide before crossing into Manitoba after it leaves Lake of the Woods and the rugged spine of northern Ontario. They say that our cheekbones are cut from those granite ridges that rise above our homeland. They say that the deep brown of our eyes seeped out of the fecund earth that surrounds the lakes and marshes. The Old Ones say that our long straight hair comes from the waving grasses that thatch the edges of bays. Our feet and hands are broad and flat and strong, like the paws of a bear. Our ancestors learned to travel easily through territories that the Zhaunagush, the white man, later feared and sought our help to navigate. Our talk rolls and tumbles like the rivers that served as our roads. Our legends tell of how we emerged from the womb of our Mother the Earth; Aki is the name we have for her. We sprang forth intact, with Aki’s heartbeat thrumming in our ears, prepared to become her stewards and protectors. When I was born our people still talked this way. We had not yet stepped beyond the influence of our legends. That was a border my generation crossed, and we pine for a return that has never come to be.

These people here want me to tell my story. They say I can’t understand where I’m going if I don’t understand where I’ve been. The answers are within me, according to them. By telling our stories, hardcore drunks like me can set ourselves free from the bottle and the life that took us there. I don’t give a shit about any of that. But if it means getting out of this place quicker, then telling my story is what I will do.

It was social workers at the hospital who sent me here. The New Dawn Centre. They call it a treatment facility. The counsellors here say Creator and the Grandmothers and the Grandfathers want me to live. They say a lot of things. In fact, they talk all the time, and they expect us to do the same. They sit there with their eyes all shiny and wet and hopeful, thinking we don’t see them waiting. Even with my eyes on my shoes I can feel them. They call it sharing. It’s one of our ancient tribal principles as Ojibway people, they claim. Many hearts beating together makes us stronger. That’s why they put us in the sharing circle.

There are at least thirty of us staying here. Everyone from kids in their late teens to a few in their thirties, like me, and one woman who’s so old she can’t talk much anymore. We sit in circles all day. I tire of talk. It wearies me. It makes me wish for a drink. But I endure it, and when my counsellor, Moses, ushers me into his office for one-on-one time, I endure that too. I’ve been here a month, after six weeks in the hospital, and that’s the longest I’ve been without a drink for years, so I guess there’s some use to it. My body feels stronger. My head is clear. I eat heartily. But now, they say, the time has come for the hardest work. If we want to live at peace with ourselves, we need to tell our stories.

I can’t tell mine in the circle. I know that. There’s too much to sort out and sift through. And I’ve noticed the younger ones getting all twitchy in their seats the few times I’ve tried to speak. Maybe they don’t believe me, or something about what I’m saying pisses them off. Either way, I can’t talk there. So Moses gave me permission to write things down. So I will. Then I’ll get on with life. Somewhere.

Our people have rituals and ceremonies meant to bring us vision. I have never participated in any of them, but I have seen things. I have been lifted up and out of this physical world into a place where time and space have a different rhythm. I always remained within the borders of this world, yet I had the eyes of one born to a different plane. Our medicine people would call me a seer. But I was in the thrall of a power I never understood. It left me years ago, and the loss of that gift has been my greatest sorrow. Sometimes it feels as though I have spent my entire life on a trek to rediscover it.

2

I wasn’t there the day the first Indian horse came to our people, but I heard the story so many times as a boy that it became real to me.

The Ojibway were not people of the horse. Our land existed as an untamed thing, lakes, rivers, bogs and marshes surrounded by citadels of bush and rock and the labyrinthine weave of country. We had no need of maps to understand it. We were people of the manitous. The beings that shared our time and place were lynx, wolf, wolverine, bear, crane, eagle, sturgeon, deer, moose. The horse was a spirit dog meant to run in open places. There was no word for it in the old talk until my great-grandfather brought one back from Manitoba.

When the sun was warm and the song of the wind could be heard in the rustle of the trees, our people said that the Maymaygwayseeuk, the water spirits, had come out to dance. That’s the kind of day it was. Sparkling. The eyes of the spirits winking off the water.

My great-grandfather had wandered off into the bite of the north wind one day near the end of winter, headed west to the land of our cousins, the Ojibway of the plains. His name was Shabogeesick. Slanting Sky. He was a shaman and a trapper, and because he spent so much time out on the land, it told him things, spoke to him of mysteries and teachings. They say he had the sending thought, the great gift of the original teachers. It was a powerful medicine, allowing vital teachings to be shared among people separated by tremendous distance. Shabogeesick was one of the last to claim its energy before history trampled it under foot. The land called to him one day and he walked off without a word to anyone. No one worried. It was something he did all the time.

But that late spring afternoon when he walked back out of the bush from the east, he was leading a strange black animal by a rope halter. Our people had never seen such a creature, and they were afraid. It was massive. Huge as a moose, but without antlers, and the sound of its hoofs on the ground was that of drums. It was like a great wind through a fissure in rock. People shrank from the sight of it.

What manner of being is this? they asked. Do you eat it?

How does it come to walk beside a man? Is it a dog? Is it a grandfather who lost his way?

The people had many questions. None would approach the animal and when it lowered its head and began to graze on the grass, they gasped.

It is like a deer.

"Is it as gentle as Waywashkeezhee?"

It is called a horse, Shabogeesick told them. In the land of our cousins it is used to travel long distances, to bear loads too heavy for men, to warn of Zhaunagush before he can be seen.

Horse, the people said in unison. The big animal lifted its head and whinnied, and they were afraid.

Does it mock us? they asked.

It announces itself, Shabogeesick said. It comes bearing great teachings.

He’d brought the animal back on the train and walked it thirty miles from the station to our camp on the Winnipeg River. It was a Percheron. A draught horse. A working beast, and Shabogeesick showed the people how to halter it, to rig it with straps sewn from cedar roots and trading post rope so it could haul the carcasses of moose and bear many miles out of the bush. Children learned to ride on its broad back. The horse pulled elders on toboggans across the deep snows of winter and allowed men to cut trees and haul the logs to the river where they would float them to the mill for money. Horse was indeed a gift and the people called him Kitchi-Animoosh. Great Dog.

Then one day Shabogeesick called everyone together in a circle on the teaching rocks where the Old Ones drew stories on the stone. The people were only ever called to those sacred stones when something vital needed to be shared. No one knows where that place is today. Of all the things that would die in the change to come, the way to that sacred place was perhaps the most grievous loss. Shabogeesick had brought Kitchi-Animoosh, and Horse nibbled at the succulent leaves of the aspen while my great-grandfather spoke.

When the horse first called to me, I did not understand the message, Shabogeesick told them. "I had not heard that voice before. But our cousins on the plains spoke to me of the goodness of this Being, and I fasted and prayed in the sacred sweat lodge for many days to learn to speak with it.

"When I emerged from the sweat lodge this Horse was there. I walked with it upon the plains and the Horse offered me its teachings.

"A great change will come. It will come with the speed of lightning and it will scorch all our lives. This is what Horse said to me under that great bowl of sky. ‘The People will see many things they have never seen before, and I am but one of them.’ This is what he said to me.

"When the Zhaunagush came they brought the Horse with them. The People saw the Horse as special. They sought to learn its medicine. It became a sign of honour to ride these spirit beings, to race the wind with them. But the Zhaunagush could only see this act as thievery, as the behaviour of lesser people, so they called us horse thieves.

The change that comes our way will come in many forms. In sights that are mysterious to our eyes, in sounds that are grating on our ears, in ways of thinking that will crash like thunder in our hearts and minds. But we must learn to ride each one of these horses of change. It is what the future asks of us and our survival depends on it. That is the spirit teaching of the Horse.

The People did not know what to make of this talk. Shabogeesick’s words scared them. But they trusted him and they had come to love Kitchi-Animoosh. So they took good care of him, fed him choice grains and hay that they traded for at the rail line. The children rode him to keep him fit. When the treaty men found us in our isolated camp and made us sign our names to the register, they were surprised to see the horse. When they asked how he had come to be there, the People pointed at Shabogeesick, and it was the Zhaunagush who called him Indian Horse. It has been our family name ever since.

3

All that I knew of Indian died in the winter of 1961, when I was eight years old.

My grandmother, Naomi, was very old then. She was the matriarch of the small band of people I was born to. We still lived a bush life at that time. We had little contact with anyone besides the Zhaunagush at the Northern Store in Minaki, where we took our furs and berries, or the odd group of wandering Indians who stumbled across our camps. If there was ever a sign of an approaching stranger, our grandmother hurried my brother Benjamin and me off into the bush. We would stay there until the stranger departed, even if that took a day or so.

There was a spectre in our camp. We could see the shadow of this dark being in the lines of our mother’s face. She would sometimes sit huddled close to the fire, clenching and unclenching her fists, her eyes dark moons in the firelight. She never spoke at times like that, never could be comforted. I’d walk to her and take her hand but she didn’t notice me. It was as if she was under the influence of a potent medicine no shaman had the power to break. The spectre lived in the other adults too, my father and my aunt and uncle. But its most chilling presence was in my mother.

The school, she would whisper then. The school.

It was the school that Naomi hid us from. It was the school that had turned my mother so far inward she sometimes ceased to exist in the outside world. Naomi had seen the adults of our camp taken away as children. She’d seen them return bearing a sorrow that could not be reached, and when my grandfather died, she took her family back to the land, hoping that an Ojibway life might heal them, ease their pain.

Besides my brother, I had a sister that I never met. Her name was Rachel, and the year before I was born she disappeared. She was six.

The Zhaunagush came from across the water, our grandmother told Benjamin and me one time when we were hidden in the trees. "It was the end of August and we were coming back to the river from the summer camp near One Man Lake. Our canoes were full of berries. We planned to go to Minaki to sell them and buy supplies for the winter. We were tired.

"I never thought they’d come in the dawn. Me, I always thought the Zhaunagush slept late like fat old bears. But they walked into our camp and I pulled my robe up over Benjamin who was so small and hid him from their view. But they found Rachel and they took her away in their boat.

"I stood on the rocks and watched them. Them, they had a boat with a motor, and when they rounded the bend in the river I thought how fast things can vanish from our view. Her screams hung in the air like smoke from a green fire. But even they finally vanished and all that was left was the wake from that boat slapping at the rocks at my feet.

That’s all I carry of her now—the wet slap of water on the rocks. Every time I hear it I remember the dawn the white men came and stole Rachel from us.

So we hid from the white men. Benjamin and I developed the quick ears of bush people. When we detected the drone of an engine we knew to run. We’d grab the old lady’s hand and scuttle into the trees and find a place to secret ourselves away until we knew for certain that there was no danger.

I learned English at the same time I learned Ojibway. My father taught me to read from Zhaunagush books, taught me to form the sounds the letters built with the tip of his finger as my guide. They felt hard, those white man words; sharp and pointed on my tongue. Old Naomi fought against it, trying to throw the books in the fire.

They come in different ways, them, the Zhaunagush, she said. Their talk and their stories can sneak you away as quick as their boats.

So I grew up afraid of the white man. As it turned out, I had reason to be.

In 1957, when I was four, they got my brother, Benjamin. The old lady and I were gathering roots in a glade back of the trees that stood against the river. The men and my brother were at the foot of a rapids setting gill nets. The airplane came out of the west, and we did not hear it soon enough. Naomi and I made it to a cleft in the rocks, but the men and my brother had nowhere to go. The plane cut them off, and we crawled up out of our crevice in the rocks and watched as those men from the plane lowered a canoe and forced my family’s canoe to the opposite shore. They had guns, those Zhaunagush. I think that if they hadn’t, my father and my uncle would have fought them off and we would have run into the back country. But they took my brother at gunpoint and pushed him up into the plane.

My mother collapsed on the long, flat rock that reached out into the river at our camp. No one could move

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