Abstract
Dissonant rhythms of folk guitar, acid rock, and the occasional burst of tribal drumming echoed through the halls and down the stairwells of Toronto’s newest high-rise. Paying residents and their guests intermingled with transient bodies in the commotion of the first-floor lobby, a kinetic response to the psychedelic murals covering the walls. University students, young couples with small children, middle-aged eccentrics, and a few elderly pensioners milled around the elevators, reading the latest graffiti and waiting for a vertical trip home. The doors finally opened with a rush of air, disgorging passengers and the smell of human habitation. Quickly filled to capacity, the car began its ascent back up the unlit shaft, bearing its colorful load and more than a hint of exotic homegrown and other combustible herbs.1
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Notes
Harold Cardinal, The Unjust Society: The Tragedy of Canada’s Indians (Edmonton, Alberta: M. G. Hurtig, 1969), 23; “The Institute for Indian Studies,” [1969?], Appendix D, NAA/CSM, series 8—American Indians General, box 53; Sharpe, Rochdale, 175, 231; Henry Mietkiewicz and Bob Mackowycz, Dream Tower: The Life and Legacy of Rochdale College (Toronto, Ontario: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1988), 47, 85, 223; Brian J. Grieveson, Rochdale: Myth and Reality, a Personal Experience (Haliburton, Ontario: Charasee Press, 1991), 6, 10, 29.
Rochdale College Education Project, “Proposal for the Rochdale College Education Project,” in There Can Be No Light without Shadow, edited by Peter Turner (Toronto, Ontario: Rochdale College, 1971), 97–106; Adelman, Beds, 189–190; Sharpe, Rochdale, 15–20; Mietkiewicz and Mackowycz, Dream, 10–12, 16–17; Grieveson, Rochdale, 24–25.
Rochdale College Education Project, “Proposal,” 97–106; “A Start,” Rochdale College Bulletin 1, no. 1 (1966): 3–6; Adelman, Beds, 190–191; Sharpe, Rochdale, 20; Mietkiewicz and Mackowycz, Dream, 17; Seymour R. Kesten, Utopian Episodes: Daily Life in Experimental Colonies Dedicated to Changing the World (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1993), 2.
Dennis Lee, “Getting to Rochdale,” in This Book Is About Schools, edited by Satu Repo (New York, NY: Random House, 1970), 354–359; MacKenzie, Native.
Howard Adelman and Dennis Lee, eds., The University Game (Toronto, Ontario: House of Anansi Press, 1968), 1–3, 173–174.
Roger Obonsawin and Heather Howard-Bobiwash, “The Native Canadian Centre of Toronto: The Meeting Place for the Aboriginal Community for 35 Years,” in The Meeting Place: Aboriginal Life in Toronto, edited by Frances Sanderson and Heather Howard-Bobiwash (Toronto, Ontario: Native Canadian Centre of Toronto, 1997), 26–34; Eleanor Hill and Lorraine Le Camp, “My Recollections of the ‘Indian Club,’” in The Meeting Place: Aboriginal Life in Toronto, edited by Frances Sanderson and Heather Howard-Bobiwash (Toronto, Ontario: Native Canadian Centre of Toronto, 1997), 60–64; Frances Sanderson and Heather Howard-Bobiwash, eds., The Meeting Place: Aboriginal Life in Toronto (Toronto, Ontario: Native Canadian Centre of Toronto, 1997), 165.
Wilfred Pelletier and Ted Poole, No Foreign Land: The Biography of a North American Indian (New York, NY: Pantheon Books, 1973), 3ff, 24–30, 39–46, 51, 72–83.
Charles E. Hendry, Beyond Traplines: Does the Church Really Care? Towards an Assessment of the Work of the Anglican Church of Canada with Canada’s Native Peoples (Toronto, Ontario: Ryerson Press, 1969), 61–63, 74, 87; “The Institute for Indian Studies,” 2, 7, Proposal, Appendix E; “A Proposal for an Indian Ecumenical Conference Presented by the Institute for Indian Studies,” 4; Hugh McCullum, “NEC Moves to Implement Hendry, Coalition Reports,” Canadian Churchman 96, no. 11 (1969): 8.
Robert K. Thomas, “The Role of the Church in Indian Adjustment,” Kansas Journal of Sociology 3, no. 1 (1967): 20–28; Robert K. Thomas, “The Role of the Church in Indian Adjustment,” in For Every North American Indian Who Begins to Disappear I Also Begin to Disappear: Being a Collection of Essays Concerned with the Quality of Human Relations Between the Red and White Peoples of This Continent, edited by Nishnawbe Institute (Toronto, Ontario: Neewin Publishing Company, 1971), 87.
Hugh McCullum, “Anglican Stand on Indian Policy Gets Little Response,” Canadian Churchman 96, no. 10 (1969): 18–19; Howard H. Clark, “Synod ‘Deeply Perturbed’ by Indians’ Discontent,” Canadian Churchman 96, no. 10 (1969): 19; Jean Chrétien, “Chrétien Promises Talks with Indians Will Continue,” Canadian Churchman 96, no. 10 (1969): 19; “Canadian Churchman,” Akwesasne Notes 1, no. 10 (1969): 38.
Cardinal, Unjust, 52–55ff, 80–89, 135; John A. MacKenzie, “A Cree Exposes Indian Tragedy,” Canadian Churchman 97, no. 1 (1970): 17; Ruddy, “Uncle,” 58.
Vine Deloria, Jr., Custer Died for Your Sins: An Indian Manifesto (New York, NY: Macmillan, 1969), 54ff, 243ff; Cardinal, Unjust, 1, 140ff, 162ff; Ruddy, “Uncle,” 58; James Treat, “Introduction: An American Critique of Religion,” in For This Land: Writings on Religion in America by Vine Deloria, Jr., edited by James Treat (New York, NY: Routledge, 1999), 4–5; Cardinal, April 13, 2000.
Cardinal, Unjust, 1, 3, 18, 35, 39, 75–76, 78, 91, 95, 107, 108, 111, 133, 170; “The Institute for Indian Studies,” Appendix A; Harold Cardinal, The Rebirth of Canada’s Indians (Edmonton, Alberta: Hurtig Publishers, 1977), 204–206; MacKenzie, Native; McFarlane, Brotherhood, 96–97.
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© 2003 James Treat
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Treat, J. (2003). “About Saving the World”. In: Around the Sacred Fire. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-05175-2_5
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