Thomas King
Birthday:
1943
Thomas King was born in 1943. He is a writer and actor, known for Medicine River (1993), The Closer You Get to Canada (2010) and I'm Not the Indian You Had in Mind (2007).
We do not want some paternalistic government to try and tell us what we should do.
We do not want some paternalistic government to try and tell us what we should do.
[on government apologizing for it's treatment of First Nations people] The apology is an easy thing to do. It's a ceremonial thing. It's lik...Show more »
[on government apologizing for it's treatment of First Nations people] The apology is an easy thing to do. It's a ceremonial thing. It's like cutting a cake. It's like kissing a baby. It means nothing unless you put some kind of action behind it. Show less «
Native people generally know their own local history, of their reserve and their area. They have a decent idea of what has happened there. B...Show more »
Native people generally know their own local history, of their reserve and their area. They have a decent idea of what has happened there. But it's often a very myopic idea because it doesn't connect with the larger ideas that make up policy in North America. Show less «
No matter how you frame Native history, the one inescapable constant is that Native people in North America have lost much. We've given away...Show more »
No matter how you frame Native history, the one inescapable constant is that Native people in North America have lost much. We've given away a great deal, we've had a great deal taken from us, and, if we're not careful, we will continue to lose parts of ourselves - as Indians, as Cree, as Blackfoot, as Navajo, as Inuit - with each generation. But this need not happen. Native cultures aren't static. They're dynamic, adaptive and flexible, and for many of us, the modern variations of older tribal traditions continue to provide order, satisfaction, identify and value in our lives. More than that, in the five hundred years of European occupation, Native cultures have already proven themselves to be remarkably tenacious and resilient. Show less «
A great many people believe that colonialism and racism are artifacts of the past. Unfortunately that is not the case. The negative attitude...Show more »
A great many people believe that colonialism and racism are artifacts of the past. Unfortunately that is not the case. The negative attitudes about native people that were formed and fostered in the 16th and 17th centuries have, with only minor modifications, followed us into the 21st, and they continue to inform social opinion and federal Indian policy in Ottawa and Washington. Show less «