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CHIEF WILLIAM'S STATEMENT, 1879 |
| I am an Indian Chief and my people are threatened by starvation. |
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The
white men have taken all the land all the fish. A vast country was ours. It is all gone. The noise of the threshing machine and the wagon has frightened the deer and the beaver. We have nothing to eat. My people are sick. My young men are angry. All the Indians from Canoe Creek to the headwaters of the Fraser say: “William is an old woman.” I am old and feeble and my authority diminishes every day. I am sorely puzzled. I do not know what I say next week when the chiefs are assembled in a council A war with the white man will end in our destruction, but death in war is not so bad as death by starvation.
The
land on which my people lived for five hundred years was taken by a
white man.
All our people are willing to work because they know they must work
like the white man or die.
Now, what I want to say is this: -Chief William of the Williams Lake Indian Band, 1879 |
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This site was developed by Cary Morin (NSTC Public Relations/Communications Coordinator) with the assistance of Emoda Design. Any use of any materials from this site must be done with the expressed approval of the Northern Shuswap Treaty Society. Northern Shuswap Treaty Society ©2006 |