Residential Schools In Richard Wagamese's Indian Horse

Words: 131
Pages: 1

There is much despair as the occurrence of Residential Schools has conveyed Aboriginal peoples as unworthy. The novel Indian Horse depicts the inconceivable truths of torturous treatment and unspoken emotions of desolation that belittled Indian children. It unveils the barbaric acts of incessant labour, deprivation chambers (Iron Sister), psychological abuse, beatings with no incentive, molestation, and extinguishing the Aboriginal ways and their families as denounced. Indubitably, the victims of this genocide, came to see themselves as less than human and hollow, as survival became implausible. The pronounced author, Richard Wagamese, authenticates the significance of family, culture and respect throughout the horrors of Residential Schools.