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Raymond Mason is an Ojibway activist who campaigns for the rights of residential school survivors and a founder of Spirit Wind, an organization that played a key role in the development of the Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement. This memoir offers a firsthand account of the personal and political challenges Mason confronted on this journey. A riveting and at times harrowing read, Spirit of the Grassroots People describes the author's experiences in Indian day and residential schools in Manitoba and his struggles to find meaning in life after trauma and abuse. Mason details the work that he and his colleagues did over many years to gain recognition and compensation for their suffering. Drawing from Indigenous oral traditions as well as Western historiography, the work applies the concept of two-eyed seeing to the histories of colonialism and education in Canada. The memoir is supplemented by a final chapter in which Theodore Michael Christou and Jackson Pind put Mason's story into a historical and educational context. An essential key to understanding the legacy of Indian residential and day schools, this text is both a documentation of history and a deeply personal story of a human experience.
Raymond Mason (1947—2022) was a survivor, activist, and Elder from Peguis First Nation, Manitoba. Jackson Pind is a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Education, Queen's University. Theodore Michael Christou is professor of social studies and history education and associate dean of graduate studies and research in the Faculty of Education, Queen's University.
ISBN: 9780228003519
ISBN-10: 9780228003519
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 10/22/2020 - 12:00am
On Sale: 10/22/2020 - 12:00am
Pages: 200
Language: English
Social Science / Indigenous Studies