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Margaret olemaun pokiak fenton
Margaret olemaun pokiak fenton












margaret olemaun pokiak fenton

In a attempted cry for help, Olemaun decides to be completely silent during a radio call.

margaret olemaun pokiak fenton

The only communication that she has with her family is through letters in English that are screened for content, and monitored radio callings, giving her no way to tell her parents the truth about school. Olemaun quickly sees that the outsiders are not her friends and are not there to help her learn. She, along with the many other students, are made to do chores all day in terrible conditions, and stripped of their culture and language. Olemaun spends two years of her life at the residential school where she is emotionally and physically abused. Though her parents are extremely reluctant, as they are aware of the injustices of the residential school system, they allow Olemaun the chance to see for herself. Motivated by her intense hunger to learn, she begs her parents to let her go to school, unlike the other children who would cry as they were taken away from their homes. To Olemaun, these lucky children were sent away to “outsider school” where they learned to read all day. Eight year old Olemaun Pokiak is intrigued by the life of the “outsiders” – catholic priests and nuns that take aboriginal children from their homes and take them to residential schools. This true story focusses on the hardships of young northern aboriginals that were sent to residential schools.














Margaret olemaun pokiak fenton