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≡ Download Free A Stranger At Home A True Story Christy JordanFenton Margaret PokiakFenton Liz AminiHolmes 9781554513611 Books

A Stranger At Home A True Story Christy JordanFenton Margaret PokiakFenton Liz AminiHolmes 9781554513611 Books



Download As PDF : A Stranger At Home A True Story Christy JordanFenton Margaret PokiakFenton Liz AminiHolmes 9781554513611 Books

Download PDF A Stranger At Home A True Story Christy JordanFenton Margaret PokiakFenton Liz AminiHolmes 9781554513611 Books


A Stranger At Home A True Story Christy JordanFenton Margaret PokiakFenton Liz AminiHolmes 9781554513611 Books

Amazing little story. Women’s book club studying other cultures loved it! A quick read, check mpelling story we need to know.

Read A Stranger At Home A True Story Christy JordanFenton Margaret PokiakFenton Liz AminiHolmes 9781554513611 Books

Tags : A Stranger At Home: A True Story [Christy Jordan-Fenton, Margaret Pokiak-Fenton, Liz Amini-Holmes] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <div>Traveling to be reunited with her family in the arctic, 10-year-old Margaret Pokiak can hardly contain her excitement. It’s been two years since her parents delivered her to the school run by the dark-cloaked nuns and brothers. Coming ashore,Christy Jordan-Fenton, Margaret Pokiak-Fenton, Liz Amini-Holmes,A Stranger At Home: A True Story,Annick Press,1554513618,People & Places - Canada - Native Canadian,Social Science - Customs, Traditions, Anthropology,Inuit - Cultural assimilation - Canada,Inuit women,Inuit women;Biography.,Inuit women;Biography;Juvenile literature.,Inuit youth,Inuit youth;Biography;Juvenile literature.,Pokiak-Fenton, Margaret - Childhood and youth,Biography,Children's BooksAges 9-12 Nonfiction,Children: Grades 1-2,Easy Non-Fiction,JUVENILE,JUVENILE NONFICTION Biography & Autobiography General,Juvenile Grades 1-2 Ages 6-7,Juvenile Nonfiction,Juvenile Nonfiction People & Places Canada Native Canadian,Juvenile Nonfiction Social Science Customs, Traditions, Anthropology,Juvenile NonfictionSocial Science - Customs, Traditions, Anthropology,Juvenile literature,People & Places - CanadaNative Canadian,People & places (Children's Teenage),Picture Book

A Stranger At Home A True Story Christy JordanFenton Margaret PokiakFenton Liz AminiHolmes 9781554513611 Books Reviews


A Stranger at Home by Christy Jordan-Fenton & Margaret Pokiak-Fenton, illustrated by Liz Amini-Holmes, Annick Press, 2011

It is impossible to read A Stranger At Home and its prequel, Fatty Legs, without becoming angry at the injustice that was perpetrated upon the Aboriginal people in Canada in the name of "civilization" and "assimilation." As I read both books, I was overwhelmed by conflicting emotions of shame, anger, and sorrow at how systematic and cruel the residential school system was and how early this misguided endeavour began and how long it lasted--the first residential schools were set up in the 1840s with the last one closing as recently as 1996. The purpose of the schools, which separated children from their families, has been described as "killing the Indian in the child" -- that is, robbing Indian children of their culture, language, family, community, and sense of place in the world into which they were born and belong, in short, their humanity.

Fatty Legs and A Stranger at Home are stellar memoirs. In the first book we meet Olemaun, whose name is changed to Margaret by the nuns. Margaret longs to know how to read (her older sister Rosie spent four years at the residential school and reads Alice In Wonderland to her). Each year when the schooner the Immaculata docks to "pluck" the children and take them to school, she asks her father whether this is the year she can go. He's had the experience of being "plucked" from his family to go to school and resists passing this legacy onto his daughter. But, finally, he agrees because he knows that Margaret must learn to read and write in order to get on in a world that is changing, because it is increasingly being taken over by "outsiders." The ice returns early that year. Margaret cannot return to the family home on Banks Island and spends two full years at the school in Aklavik, in the Mackenzie River Delta, without a summer break. Her experiences, at the school, are depicted in Fatty Legs.

In A Stranger at Home, Margaret's return to her family completes the story. In Tuktoyaktuk, Margaret is finally reunited with her family and can't wait to get home to Banks Island, far away from the school she has come to despise. But a few shocking surprises are in story for her. She no longer remembers how to speak Inuvialuktan, her native tongue; she can't stomach the food she once loved; and is astounded when her mother announces upon seeing her, "Not my girl. Not my girl." The last shock is the hardest to bear. Father has decided to live in Tuk and get work with the Whites. Banks Island will no longer be home. There are just one too many changes for Margaret.

The pain of Margaret's re-entry into family life is perfectly rendered in Christy Jordan-Fenton's poetically dark and emotionally sensitive prose. I asked her how she created the flow of the narrative from stories told to her by her mother-in-law, Margaret Pokiak-Fenton. "Basically, she (Margaret) doesn't drive and being elderly I drive her to town a lot for appointments and such. She's always telling me stories and I have a memory like an elephant for conversations. So, I try my best to keep inside her voice, while also trying to make the words fit in a literary way. I stitch it all together, asking questions as I go and doing research -- Maggie's great (that would be Maggie De Vries, super editor) for hounding me to research -- then I let Margaret read and change anything she doesn't like."

A Stranger At Home is as finely crafted and beautifully illustrated as the first book. Both are works of art in every way -- the text is completely accessible for children ages 8 to 12, and a joy for adults to read; and the illustrations are exquisite, with the photographs featured in the margins gathered, as an added bonus, at the back of each book. The illustrator, Liz Amini-Holmes, painted the drawings in acrylic, then scanned the art and made final adjustments to colour in photo shop. If you'd like to see more of her technique visit Liz's blog at [...] "My goal in all of my work," says Liz, "and certainly with Fatty Legs and A Stranger at Home, is for the reader to feel the art, not just look at it, making an emotional connection." Both artists have exceeded this goal and the emotional connection the reader feels with Margaret is strong and authentic.

Finally, I asked the author what the response from the aboriginal community has been. "The response has been amazing for FATTY LEGS! It has been short listed for the First Nation Communities Read program, which is really exciting. A STRANGER AT HOME is still so new I don't think many people have read it yet. We were invited to speak at the Truth and Reconciliation National Event in Inuvik, which was a great honour. I was completely overwhelmed by the gratitude shown to me by the elders there. Margaret of course, has become an overnight hero and I think it is fantastic to see her celebrated in that way!"

Fatty Legs and A Stranger at Home are unique and compelling stories, and I highly recommend both.
A Stranger at Home is the third true story by Christy Jordan-Fenton about the impact which residential schools had on her mother-in-law Margaret Pokiak-Fenton. It’s also my favorite thus far in the series. A Stranger at Home poignantly portrays the struggles which Olemaun faces as she attempts to rediscover her place within her Inuit community and even within her family, both of which Olemaun has been apart from for two years.

Although Olemaun had been desperate to return home, she now finds herself just of much of an outsider among her own people as she had been at the church-run school. When her parents pick Olemaun up to take her home, Olemaun finds the Inuit language strange to her tongue. Her mother assumes Olemaun will be hungry and so she brings a package of what used to be Olemaun’s favorite foods. However, two years of eating only the white man’s food have taken their toll on her body and the food which once brought Olemaun comfort now sicken her and cause her nose to crinkle. When the family finally reach their canvas tent, the family dogs almost take Olemaun’s hand off because they no longer recognize her scent. Nothing feels the same anymore, not the hour her family rises or the games her sisters play or even the clothes everyone wears.

On some levels, because of my relocating from Canada to the United States, I relate to Olemaun’s attempts to hold onto her heritage. The minute I cross into my home province of Newfoundland, after being away for a year, I start soaking up the unique accent. I also start searching out local foods. There are also naturally changes in family. Although my dog whom I left with my parents is now gone, the first year I returned home after a long absence, he growled at me. Moreover, my siblings were in primary school when I initially left home, which means every year I return being less and less connected to their world. Hence, part of the appeal of A Stranger at Home is that whether one has moved simply from a town or whether one has taken the bigger step of embracing a new culture, everyone will find common ground with Olemaun and will be subsequently moved.

What compounds Olemaun’s struggles is that her family has decided not to return to Banks Island, where they normally spend most of their year. Moreover, they are feeling the pressure of needing to adapt to the white man’s world. Olemaun’s father is picking up extra work as a special constable to the RCMP, who rely on his skills to help them adapt in an environment colder that what they are familiar. Olemaun’s mother doesn’t understand the store clerks who speak English, which means she is often charged for goods that she didn’t purchase. Last, the government is continuing to encourage Inuit parents to send their children to school. While Olemaun had to years ago convince her parents to send her away, now they want her sisters to attend because they need not just the wisdom of their people but also the knowledge of the outsiders. I have not read many stories about those who both want to hold onto their heritage, while embracing that of an alien culture, and so this is another positive about A Stranger at Home. It helped me understand how challenging the situation can be and should resonate strongly with those students do face this dilemma.

Years ago, Thomas Wolfe made popular the sentiment, “You can’t go home again”. While the end pages of A Stranger at Home make clear that many Inuit children such as Olemaun have proved this phrase wrong, Olemaun’s story also shows how hard of a fight it was to reclaim their heritage. Today Aboriginal people are trying to provide support through classes in traditional language, instruction by elders on customs, and celebration of culture through powwows, traditional arts and crafts, and stories like those told by Christy and Margaret. A Stranger at Home is an amazing story about the resilience of a special Inuit girl.
Amazing little story. Women’s book club studying other cultures loved it! A quick read, check mpelling story we need to know.
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