James Daschuk excavates an authentically Canadian past from under layers of 
colonial myth. 
non-fiction

First Nations history should make us question what it means to be Canadian 
APARNA SANYAL 

Special to The Globe and Mail

Published Friday, Sep. 27 2013, 4:00 PM EDT 

Last updated Friday, Sep. 27 2013, 4:00 PM EDT 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/books-and-media/book-reviews/first-nations-history-should-make-us-question-what-it-means-to-be-canadian/article14578889/
  a.. Title Clearing the Plains
  b.. Disease, Politics of Starvation, and the Loss of Aboriginal Life
  c.. Author James Daschuk
  d.. Genre nonFiction
  e.. Publisher University of Regina Press
  f.. Pages 318
  g.. Price $39.95
In 1882, Cree chief Big Bear, his people starving, adhered to Treaty 6 in 
exchange for food from the Dominion of Canada. He had argued for fairer treaty 
provisions, but rations had been deliberately withheld by the government of Sir 
John A. Macdonald, whose plan was to "starve unco-operative Indians onto 
reserves and into submission." Big Bear began negotiating with other Cree 
communities to take reserve lands next to each other. Macdonald's government 
rejected the chief's proposal, reneging on an earlier promise. Big Bear later 
tried to dissuade members of his band from violence against white settlers, 
helping instead with the release of hostages. Amid widespread indigenous 
famine, Sir John A. Macdonald focused on his National Dream, his Indian 
commissioner declaring of rancid rations: "The Indians should eat the bacon or 
die."


 
Who was the true Canadian, Big Bear or Sir John A.?

If the mark of a great work of history is its power to reorient the reader's 
sense of identity, then James Daschuk's Clearing the Plains is colossal. This 
is excavation of an authentically Canadian past from under layers of colonial 
myth, performed with a scalpel, and illuminated by searing prose.

Nothing underscores how critical this reorientation is than the statistic 
presented in the book's introduction: While Canada consistently ranks among the 
top nations on the United Nations Human Development Index, the country's 
indigenous population would rank 63rd. "How did we get here?" is the question 
driving Daschuk's narrative which focuses with deceptive simplicity on what 
indigenous communities on the central plains ate, how they lived, which 
diseases they contracted. The book is divided into two halves, the first 
scrutinizing the pre-European period and the early and later fur-trade eras; it 
highlights the increasingly negative impact on indigenous life of the violence, 
alcoholism and greed rife in the fur trade, particularly after the English 
takeover of Quebec. The second half examines state policy toward indigenous 
peoples of the plains after the annexation of the west by the Dominion of 
Canada.

The devastating import of this structure becomes apparent. The horrors of the 
fur trade pale in comparison with the torment unleashed by the 
development-minded dominion government on plains communities after the collapse 
of the bison herds due to overhunting. Daschuk demonstrates that the chronic 
famine in these communities sprang from the politics of food distribution 
rather than a lack of food: ".while the Indians were starving, in many cases to 
death, the authorities withheld food that was available." One Liberal MP 
accused the government of "a policy of submission shaped by a policy of 
starvation." Attempts by indigenous peoples to become self-sufficient after 
they had "traded their independence for food" were deliberately thwarted: 
agricultural experiments were rendered useless by the government's refusal to 
provide milling equipment. Indigenous women were often sexually abused by 
corrupt officials in exchange for food. Rations provided were frequently unfit 
for consumption and 
 sometimes deadly. As the country was "opened," government officials expelled 
thousands of people from their traditional territories and grew "merciless in 
their use of food to control the First Nations population."

The author portrays the slow transformation of First Nations peoples from 
entrepreneurs in a global economy to inmates in de facto concentration camps, 
denied access to reserve storehouses, confined by the "pass system" to lands 
barren of game and produce, increasingly sick, dying in droves of "actual 
starvation." This depiction is obsessively substantiated: There are 55 pages of 
notes and more than 50 pages of bibliography, as well as charts, maps and 
photos, for a text of less than 200 pages. The style is precise, tense, 
inexorable. The effect on the reader is cumulative and profound. One 
understands that here was ethnic cleansing and mass murder without 
documentarians or tribunals. This book, then, is an attempt to bear witness, a 
retrospective camera held in the hand of a historian aware of the 
responsibility he is shouldering.

It is hard to do justice to a work this necessary. "The effects of the 
state-sponsored attack on indigenous communities . haunt us still." In its 
scorching entirety, Clearing the Plains suggests that if present-day Canadians 
stay blind to our true past, if we do not learn to see ourselves in Big Bear, 
who, malnourished and subjugated, preferred negotiation to massacre, and not 
just in Sir John A., who would have his railway at any human cost, we are 
condemned to keep reinforcing the material gaps between our mainstream and our 
indigenous populations - to remain, in the ugliest sense, a colony and not a 
nation.

Aparna Sanyal is a writer living in Montreal.


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