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Kuei, My Friend : A Conversation on Racism and Reconciliation - Deni Ellis Bechard

Kuei, My Friend

A Conversation on Racism and Reconciliation

By: Deni Ellis Bechard, Natasha Kanape Fontaine, Howard Scott (Translator)

Paperback | 12 July 2018

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Kuei, My Friend is an engaging book of letters: a literary and political encounter between Innu poet Natasha Kanape Fontaine and Quebecois-American novelist Deni Ellis Bechard. Choosing the epistolary form, they decided to engage together in a frank conversation about racism and reconciliation.

Intentionally positioned within the contexts of the Idle No More movement, Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and the National Inquiry into Missing or Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls, the letters in Kuei, My Friend pose questions in a reciprocal manner: how can we coexist if our common history involves collective and personal episodes of shame, injury, and anger? how can we counteract misunderstandings of the Other, which so often lead to contempt and rejection? how can we educate non-Indigenous communities about the impact of cultural genocide on the First Peoples and the invisible privileges resulting from historical modes of domination?

In an attempt to open a sincere and productive dialogue, Kanape Fontaine and Ellis Bechard use their personal stories to understand words and behaviours that are racist or that result from racism. With the affection and intimacy of a friend writing to a friend, Natasha recounts to her addressee her discovery of the residential schools, her obsession with the Oka Crisis of 1990, and her life on the Pessamit reserve. Reciprocating, Deni talks about his father's racism, the segregation of African-Americans and civil rights, and his identity as a Quebecois living in the English-speaking world.
By sharing honestly even their most painful memories, these two writers offer an accessible, humanist book on the social bridge-building and respect for difference. Kuei, My Friend is accompanied by a chronology of events, a glossary of relevant terms in the Innu language, and, most importantly, a detailed teacher's guide that includes topics of discussion, questions, and suggested reflections for examination in a classroom setting.

Industry Reviews
Acclaim for the French edition "Racism is always based on simplification," writes author Deni B�chard. Can simplification also help to counter it? Poet Natasha Kanape Fontaine and B�chard make the bet that yes, by signing with four hands Kuei, I greet you. This conversation on racism is organized as an exchange of 26 letters. From the beginning it was targetted mainly at young people and high school and college students, since "it is through them that society can change." Two writers who seek to answer by the words, excluding literature, to the shortcomings of education.

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