Grey Owl didn’t quite make it his 50th birthday.
Yet somehow, despite a rather large drinking problem…he managed to become an iconic Canadian symbol and our “…apostle for the wilderness.”
In spite of being a ‘properly’ brought up British boy, once Archie Belaney moved to Canada, he recreated himself as an idealized ‘Indian’. His was the classic cigar-store Indian, right down to his showy headdress and buckskin outfit. He was not representative of any particular tribal nation but more of a Hollywood mish-mash of the romanticized Indian.
He coloured his hair with black ash and wore it in two long braids. Secretly, he darkened his skin with berry juice.
He was ‘revealed’ as a fraud after his death.
We don’t have to go too deep to think that a young British boy, abandoned by his parents (they moved to the U.S., leaving little Archie with two aunts), might have many reasons to create a new story of his existence.
But then, aren’t we all our own creations?
I don’t doubt that Archie’s transformation to Grey Owl was very real to him.
He lived true to the life he claimed. He lived in his little log cabin, which included the lakeside wall taken over by a beaver lodge. It must have been a rather odiferous occupation in that small house, enough so, that his Mohawk-Iroquois wife, Anahareo, insisted on another cabin being built up the hill where she could live without any rambunctious beavers.
In a newly-colonized Canada, where extraction of resources and conquest of the indigenous peoples was the norm, Grey Owl ’s noble voice spoke of novel ideas of conservation, ideas that were a revelation to the new Canadians.
Is it any wonder that the National Parks Service (later called Parks Canada), made him their iconic representative and employee, built him a cabin on Parks land and sent him over to Europe on speaking tours?
Years ago, I read a wonderful book called The Impressionist by Hari Kunzru. In that novel, the protagonist morphed from rich to poor, male to female and anything else he had to do to survive bizarre and extreme circumstances. I loved how Kunzru explored the process of how we build our identities.
Hopefully, most of us do not have to build our personalities under such extreme situational conditions.
But create ourselves we do.
We take the genetic roulette we are given and then make up our identities in response to our surroundings and to the story we tell ourselves about our lives.
Perhaps all Archie Belaney did was to be a little more dramatic about it than the rest of us.
Was he a fraud? I’m still not sure, but somehow I don’t really think so.
I ask myself, is it up to me to decide who or what someone thinks they are? Do I get to tell you whether you should declare yourself more Métis than Mennonite? How can I possibly know your innermost responses to the world? How could I ever recreate all the conditions and experiences, biological and otherwise, that brought you to this point in your self-ness? Do I get to determine whether you identify more female than male? And while we’re on that topic, why on earth would I be frightened or threatened by your choices?
Aren’t we all just trying to be our most authentic selves and doing the best we know how?
Clearly, Grey Owl wrestled with his own demons. He had several wives (at least two of them at the same time). He was, as previously mentioned, a serious drinker. And, although he was on the Parks payroll, there were other Parks employees who were quite tired of having to bail him out of jails and drunken fights.
Yet he also represented Canada well. He spoke with a quiet confidence for the cause of conservation and was a passionate advocate on how we could all do more to connect with Nature, to be more careful, to be more considerate of our environment.
Yes, he co-opted a First Nations identity. But he also learned and lived with the Objiway for many years and his Mohawk/Iroquois wife, Anahereo, was hugely influentiantial in his views. In how many marriages do we tend to tilt toward one spouse’s identity over another? We raise our children Catholic versus Jewish, with Ukrainian food over Armenian, favour this side’s cousins over the other’s.
Our personalities are not fixed. They are mutable and plastic. Certainly there is the basic genetic foundation we are born with, but after that, so much is determined by our reactions to how we are nurtured (or not), and most certainly, by the stories we tell to ourselves about who we are.
We only have to look at the variations in a forest to see this at work. There, we see the spindly tree in the shadow of its brother. Or the crooked tree reaching for the light, bent and twisted by the dominating parent tree. Some are short, some are sick and stunted, some are tall…
But isn’t it wonderful that there is such wildly divergent variation? Side-by-side, all those weird and wonderful trees are a completely glorious new entity.
I like to think that Archie was, in the end, truly Grey Owl. I like to believe that he created himself to be all that he hoped was the best of the indigenous culture that had fascinated him since childhood; a way of life that became his fixation, his focus, his purpose, and, ultimately, his escape.
Clearly Archie did something right…we’re still calling him Grey Owl.
To experience and understand a little more of Grey Owl’s life, head out to Prince Albert National Park, where you can take a wonderful trip to see his cabin with Waskesiu Marinas.
An update with further reading from the Saskatoon Star Phoenix.
My mother heard Grey Owl speak at a School assembly in London England in the 30s. He ignited her passion for Canada long before she emigrated. If he had been a mascot we wouldn’t question his relevance as a marketing tool.
Great story Prisca. That’s more proof that no one is one thing and one thing only. He did so much to promote the Canada and the concept of conservation. I’m glad his appearance helped bring your mother to Canada.
I find some terrible and eerie irony in the fact that the Canadian government had Grey Owl on their payroll to promote parks and sustainability through a man pretending to be First Nations on traditional indigeous land that had only just been appropriated from ACTUAL Indigenous people.
Grey Owl was getting paid by the government to promote a way of life (in the image of an indigenous man) that the Canadian government was enforcing policy to eradicate through the Indian Act and Residential Schools- to rid the country of the “Indian problem”.
On top of that, the creation of the PA National park boarders included evicting hundreds of Metis families that had survived the battle of Batoche, and migrated north to where the park is today but were removed from their homes once again because the Governemnt decided that they wanted the land.
I guess I can appreciate the message that Grey Owl was advocating but the historical context of the time and space is a perfect example of the Canadian government creating an image of the Canadian Story while doing something very, very different.
“The truth about stories, is that it’s all we are.” – Tom King
Cory. These are all such great points and your in-depth comment provides much-needed context to the understanding of the time and policies. There are so many repercussions of all that has come before us.
I think the most important aspect of what you have written, is that it is incumbent upon us to look as deeply as possible into any and all stories that we are told.
It is always more complicated than any surface picture can provide.
And yes, we agree that he at least was advocating a good message, but the context of all that was being done to the indigenous at the time is beyond ironic. It is angering and disheartening.
We still have so much work to do in acknowledging what happened and is happening still.
You are such a lovely writer Coleen! Enjoy following your story across Canada!
Thanks Kelly. I appreciate your company on the trip 🙂
Someone who changes gender, are they a fake ….someone who embodies another…are they a fake. Is it enough that someone who reveres another is considered as the living theme of the “sincerest form of flattery”. Grey Owl embodies all that is good in the human experience – whether native “american” native “pagan” european or other. When you are good, are inspirational I say you are FABULOUS, …..darling !
Love it Janet!
Of course, you’re right! Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery (and in Grey Owl’s case) reverence. I am no longer in doubt. Thanks for this.
Nice one Colleen… got me thinkin’ …
Thanks Glenn. It strikes me that lots of thinking is part of your usual state ????