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NEWSMAKERS' GUIDE
ACCLAIM
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
AUTHOR INTERVIEW
REVIEWS
AUTHOR'S BLOG

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Publication Date: January 19, 2010
Category:fiction / aboriginal issues / USA and Canadian public affairs
ISBN: 978-1-926577-00-5
Price: $39.95
Format: 6" x 9", 509 pages, hard cover
Features: author interview, maps


"We have a right to be frustrated, concerned, angry--anger that's building and building."
—Phil Fontaine,
Grand Chief of the Assembly of First Nations
CTV News, May 15, 2007



"It's time to quit being loyal Canadians...We don’t need the white man's money. We need a share of our own wealth. There are only two ways of dealing with the white man. Either you pick up a gun or you stand between him and his money."
—Terrance Nelson,
Chief, Roseau River First Nation, Manitoba
CTV News, May 15, 2007


Douglas Bland

A

root cause of terrorism in far-away countries, Canadians are told, is poor, desperate young people who turn their frustrations and anger on their “rich oppressors.” Uprising brings this scenario home to Canada.

          When impoverished, disheartened, poorly educated, but well-armed aboriginal young people find a modern revolutionary leader in the tradition of 1880s rebellion leader Louis Riel, they rally with a battle cry “Take Back the Land!” Theirs is a fight to right the wrongs inflicted on them by “the white settlers.”

          They know their minority force cannot take on all Canada. They don’t need to. A surprise attack on the nation’s most vulnerable assets—its abundant energy resources — sends the Canadian Armed Forces scrambling and politicians reeling. Over a few tension-filled days as the battles rage, the frantic prime minister can only watch as the insurrection paralyzes the country. But when energy-dependent Americans discover the southward flow of Canadian hydroelectricity, oil, and natural gas is halted, they do not remain passive.

          Although none of Canada’s leaders saw it coming, the shattering consequences unfold with the same plausible harmony by which quiet aboriginal protests decades ago became the eerie premonitions of today’s stand-offs and “days of action.”

Senator Romeo Dallaire: "We have heard about the Aboriginal Day of Action. Is the internal security risk rising as the youth see themselves more and more disenfranchised? In fact, if they ever coalesced, could they not bring this country to a standstill?"
The Right Honourable Paul Martin: "My answer, and the only one we all have, is we would hope not."

—Senate Committee on Aboriginal Peoples
Ottawa, Tuesday, April 8, 2008