This week I watched "Curse of the Axe" on the History Channel. It
was the second time. I seldom watch TV
shows again but this one haunted me.
Something about the story of this small piece of iron gripped my
imagination. Even my sleep lately was interrupted by dreams of the Wyandot
people who lived all around my home many, many years ago.
It seems a little melodramatic to consider a piece of iron from a European
axe a curse on the people, though it was ironically a significant part of their
future. Archeologists determined that it
was a kind of keep sake. Bartered for its unusual characteristics not its usefulness. A charm, that someone might have kept for
good luck. It was buried in the middle of the largest Wyandot village
discovered in Ontario. Thus the possibility that it was ceremoniously planted,
as one would plant corn, to grow or realize a magnificent future for the
people. In their defense, these people were no more superstitious than
Europeans who also believed, in charms, demons and witchcraft.
Aside from the fact that true
Canadian history did not begin with Cartier or Columbus as the discoverers of
this continent, this piece of iron, from my perspective, has a great deal more
to say. The significance of which did not present itself until recently.
Not more than two miles from where I now sit in my living room is the site
of a particular Wyandot village.
Villages were always nestled on terrain with similar features. It had a
defendable location. It had a river, stream or spring, and it had adequate
level, arable land nearby to grow corn.
In my youth I saw an elderly man
many times who owned this long abandoned Wyandot village. He was a retired
English gentleman who grew raspberries for a hobby and drove weekly to our
nearby village in a horse drawn buggy. In the process of working the land for raspberries,
he unearthed a great number Wyandot articles. Since our school house was only a
mile away our teacher organized a walking field trip to see what this elderly
gentleman had unearthed.
He took us to the hay mow of his large barn. There, on the outside granary
wall was a large collection of iron axes, that hung like scalps, linked
together through the handle holes by wire and tied to spikes higher up on the
wall. They were in remarkably good condition. Each were uniquely shaped, hand
crafted with varying dissimilarities. I
do not recall how many axes there were, but it was a sufficiently large amount
to have made an indelible impression on my mind. I have not seen anything, even
in a museum, yet to match this collection of axes.
As I touched them at the time, running my fingers over their edges I felt a
kind of inexplicable awe, as though I should know fully their significance. As I
watched "the curse of the axe" the memory of the old man's Wyandot
axe collection came back to me. I was suddenly filled with sadness! This site
was never abandoned! It was a village of death where the people all died from a
European born disease and beside them remained one of their most valuable
possessions, the iron axe.
No European disease affected indigenous people quite so forcefully as with the
Wyandot people, who lost more than half their population in one or two years.
In their weakened state, they were decimated by the warring Iroquois and in the
end, once a proud nation, scattered to the wind.
At the time, Wyandot medicine men concluded that it was the Jesuits who
made them ill, after noting that village people, visited by them, died in great
numbers. The Catholic Church has kept unforgivably quiet about their
involvement in the genocide of the Wyandot. It is possible that the priests who
were captured and killed were indeed disease carriers.
Should there not be remorse even from those who unwittingly cause such devastation?
Ironically the priests who were killed by the Wyandot have been vilified
and immortalized by the Church at the "Martyr’s Shrine". As heroes of the Church, it seems unlikely
that an apology, on their behalf, will ever be forthcoming!
Considering the ill fate of the owners of the property on which this Native
village stood, one could speculate that the curse has continued, but as a
retribution!
Hi. I would like to get in touch with the author of this article or, with anyone who would be familiar with the topics being addressed herein, specifically, the iron hatchet. thank you
ReplyDeleteI am the author of this article. You can contact me at the following email address:
Deleteinfo@montagnaismetis.ca
Roland Belanger Elder_Metis
As always, extremely thought provoking and enlightening.
ReplyDeleteExcellent article Elder Roland!!
I enjoyed your analysis and think you are a great man for having created this blog and website. Thank you so much for everything you do for all of us on here who are searching for the truth about their real history and ancestral linage.
Best wishes and warmest regards.
Audrey Grenier-Williams