Sovereignty In Indian Horse By Richard Wagamese

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Humanity was not meant to be cut from the same cloth, instead we made a combination to become a great mosaic. The novel Indian Horse, written by Richard Wagamese, takes the reader through the systemic stripping of Indigenous sovereignty in mid 20th century Ontario. This is done through the perspective of Saul Indian Horse, an Ojibwe boy, 8 years old. Saul lives with his wise grandmother and frequently dysfunctional parents, haunted by the loss of their other children. All will change, much will be lost when Saul is forced to attend St. Jerome’s residential school. In the novel, Indian Horse, Wagamese reveals the loss of sovereignty of Indigenous people through the experiences of Saul in his mind, through his body and his future. Firstly, Saul's …show more content…

During the beginning portion of the novel, the reader can detect this fact. There is a foreboding sense of dread in the air in relation to residential schools. Multiple of Saul's family members are irreversibly damaged from their time spent at these schools, and the reader must ask themselves if Saul is next. This damage leads his parents to leave, which sets up a series of events that ends with him at St. Jerome’s residential school, where Sister Ignacia is introduced. After meeting the new students she says this “At St. Jerome’s we work to remove the Indian from our children” (Wagamese 46/47). From this point on, the reader knows what horrors Saul will face. His “caretakers” who overlook all his needs only have one goal in mind. To forcefully shape him and the other children into a singular mold. This inturn limits the paths Saul can take for his future and completely removes his sovereignty from the equation. Once Saul leaves St. Jerome’s and enters the upper echelon of hockey, the reader then sees how his future is taken from him, even when Saul should be able to make his own decisions. “Finally, it changed the game for

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