Flat Bay Elder Calvin White talks his new book and seeing the fruits of his labour at powwows
CBC
Flat Bay's Calvin White has been to many a powwow in his time, but remembers a time when they never would have happened in Newfoundland and Labrador.
White, a member of the Order of Newfoundland and Labrador and Order of Canada, has spent over 50 years advocating for Indigenous recognition and rights in Newfoundland and Labrador.
He shares his journey through life as a Mi'kmaw person searching for recognition in his new book, One Man's Journey. Before the start of the Bay St. George Powwow in his home of Flat Bay, he spoke about the book and what the event means to him with the CBC's Alex Kennedy.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Q: Calvin, first of all congratulations on the book. How did writing it come about for you?
A: In 1972, I committed my life to the correcting of the wrongs of Aboriginal people in Newfoundland by being penciled out in the 1949 Terms of Reference. And it's a lifelong journey. So a couple of years ago, I realized that I'm not getting any younger. There hasn't been a lot of material that I and other people can find when it comes to looking at the history of the… I call it the revival. So I was inspired then, and by support of my family and some friends, to take this on.
Q: And from what I know, the book starts right at your childhood.
A: It starts at my childhood at about the age of four.
Q: Why start there?
A: From my perspective it was very important to show my readers, especially young people who this was targeted for, young university people and other young people who are pursuing their education, it was very important to show people that you don't have to come from what is termed to be an elite society, or a family of power, or a family of money in order to make a change in life. All you need to do is have the truth on your side and have the will power to pursue it.
Q: Your book goes through the struggles that you went through of getting recognition for Mi'kmaq, and Mi'kmaw culture and Mi'kmaw people. What kept you going through that struggle?
A: There was always a small number of people who are very, very inspired about about the challenge. And they continued to motivate me. They continued to talk to me about it, and while they were, you know, they were in in the shadows. I get phone calls if I met them somewhere in public [saying] they wanted to talk to me. They invited me to their house.… A lot of them were afraid of what was happening, but yet they wanted me to do what I was doing.
Q: When people read this book, what do you want them to take away from it?
A: When people read this book, what I want them to do is, I want them … to become hungry for more information. There's been a fair amount of information that has surfaced over the last 50 years since we started the movement, and other academics and professors in university and whatever — who are also academics by the way — they have taken the time to write papers and to do research. So there's much more material, way more material out there now than there ever was. So I referenced that material in my book, and hopefully people will be able to go to it and better prepare themselves to take on the challenge.