Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont (6 page)

The real issue that must torture Louis is not money but this: he keeps a secret, one as hot as the sun. It has given Louis warmth through all those frozen winters spent wandering the wilds as a banished man. Louis knows that he can’t keep this secret inside him much longer, and when he eventually shares it with his people, it will release from his chest like a flock of doves. What Louis will soon share is that he has a divine mission, a mission revealed to him by God Himself. Louis Riel has been anointed the prophet of the New World. And his anointed name is David.

In his diaries, Louis seemed to have sensed that Dumont was coming to take him back home for this express purpose. But like any mortal asked by God to do great things, Louis has his occasional doubts. He became an American citizen only a couple of years before, when it seemed as if he could never return home and live without worry of imprisonment or assassination. Louis isn’t paranoid about this matter. The premier of Ontario himself had put a $5,000 bounty on Louis’s head after the execution of Thomas Scott, and Louis keeps in mind that during his self-imposed and then governmentmandated exile, he was elected to parliament three times but never allowed to serve out of a real and rational fear for his freedom and especially for his life.

Louis had made it clear that he’d return to Montana when he’d helped all he could. At first it was going to be September, but that’s long past. The decision becomes that much more difficult because the Métis have so graciously, so boisterously taken him in with open arms. Maybe this really is Louis’s mission in life, his calling, his path. God made no bones about Louis being a chosen one. God told Louis this Himself a decade ago, near Washington, D.C., of all places, and on a mountain, no less.

Now, though, here in Saskatchewan, this austere country destined to be the new Rome, this fertile ground that’s clearly becoming a magnet for men of all nations who wish to live simply and honestly and who don’t just mind but are born for the spine-breaking work of the new life, they must know that there’s room for them all to live in harmony with their French and English and Indian brothers. Louis has already figured out how the North-West can be divided and shared. This country really is the new world of promise and riches if, and only if, one is willing to live in the agreement that it can be shared by all tribes of humanity, whether they be Scandinavian, Irish, Pole, Indian, or Métis.

In fact, this land of riches shadows the Old World of Europe, the Old World of decay and corruption. The Old World, Rome, is corrupt. And it is dying. Look at these priests like Father André, who is himself from the Old World. He does everything in his power now to prevent the Métis from creating a homeland where all will be welcome and live by the laws of God and of Jesus. Why? Is it so crazy to believe that this land of mixed bloods, of blood from all over the earth, of God’s true children, can nourish millions and become the new centre, the new Rome? Why can’t it? And why can’t Louis’s spiritual guru Bishop Bourget become the new pope? Louis doesn’t talk about this much, in part because it takes such energy and patience with fools, but this understanding that the Old World is corrupt, a whitewashed sepulchre, and that this New World is the future, well it’s easy to see. All Louis has to do is sit himself on a bank of the South Saskatchewan River, somewhere close to Gabriel’s Crossing on a warm late June day, and watch the puffy white clouds skitter past, the sound of children playing and laughing in French, Cree, English, and Michif, and he knows he’s come home, he’s arrived home. Home.

But home is always being threatened. Louis, the man with no home, Louis of all people, knows this implicitly. Red River is no longer home and hasn’t been for years. It was spoiled when it was digested into the belly of Canada, when the Métis were sold out and bought out and Louis was spit out to the south and into Minnesota. This is when the Métis were robbed of their property by the Orangemen wolves.

All that Louis fought for fourteen years ago and lost, though, has presented itself to him again. Now, the same beast that threatened Red River threatens the Métis communities of the South Saskatchewan River. A line must be drawn. This, after all, is the New World. And Louis, by God baptized David, is beginning to more clearly hear the voices that proclaim he is the chosen spiritual geographer of the New World.

With the help of his secretary, Will Jackson, Louis has finally drafted a petition, and it circulates through the Métis and white communities of the North-West during the autumn of 1884. This petition is read, debated, and fought over by them all, and in December, all have agreed it is fair, and it is ready. The petition is sent to Ottawa, a document that’s balanced, reasonable, and conservative in its requests. It’s the product of months of debate and collective bargaining.

Many months pass before an answer comes back, an answer so brutal to the Métis that the lieutenant governor of the North-West himself doesn’t have the heart or the stones to share it with them and so lies about what it actually says. But in the months of autumn turning to winter while the Métis wait for an answer—or even a simple telegram confirming that their petition has been delivered—they come to realize that once again, John A. Macdonald likes to ignore them. His pleasure in insulting the Métis and the rest of the settlers seems to have no boundaries.

Maybe it is the scorn of the government and the anger of the priests, combined with the newfound pressure of becoming the Métis leader once more, that trigger Louis to begin to reveal his secret. Experts on Riel, including the biographer Maggie Siggins and the American academic Thomas Flanagan, emphasize a heated discussion between Louis and a priest named Father Valentin Végréville in early December of 1884. The day after a wedding celebration during which Louis stays up all night praying on his knees, he runs into the cleric and berates him, insisting that the whole hierarchy of the priesthood right up to archbishop should march with the Métis. It’s during this lecture that Louis utters one simple line, but one that carries great weight: “I have a task to accomplish by reason of a divine vocation.” A divine vocation? While on the surface these words appear simple enough, for a man already viewed as a rebel and maybe even a heretic by the priests, to actually admit aloud that he believes he is basically on a mission from God will certainly give them reason to pause. More importantly, Louis’s words will provide them with ammunition to use against him.

Also well documented is another, more explosive confrontation between Louis and the clergy just a few days later. This time Louis supposedly confronts a number of priests at once while they are on a retreat. Father André, the same tough old minister to the buffalo hunters and a man so easily angered by even the slightest sign of disrespect toward his rule, is ready with his response. André bellows that Louis is becoming an enemy of the priests and that they will speak against him to all the Métis. To dare question the Church’s authority as hotly as he does means Louis is one of three things: a non-believer (which he certainly isn’t), a sinner who can be saved (which he might hopefully be), or a heretic most probably under Satan’s control (which some priests believe is a real possibility). After the run-in at the retreat, the priests discuss whether Louis, for daring to question their authority and lack of support of the Métis, should face the worst punishment available to the Catholic Church: no more receiving of the sacraments and, as some of the priests present later claim, excommunication as a heretic.

What’s been fiercely debated about this whole scenario— and many others in which Louis is the focus—is that so many of the key moments were reported long after they are supposed to have happened, and by people who had plenty of reason to twist them to their liking. The story the priests tell is that when Louis was told he was making enemies of them, he fell to his knees, crying and begging for forgiveness. It was given to him only when he promised never to lead an uprising again. In hindsight, once the uprising actually did occur and everyone around Batoche, holy men included, was on the possible hook, of course it served the priests’ best interests to cover their own cassocks. But this might be too simple.

Louis Riel can in no way be understood if his deep faith isn’t taken into account. He never utters a negative word against the priests or the church in his diaries. Of course the priests who wrote about this event had grounds to distance themselves as far as possible from Louis when agitation quickly exploded into killing. But this is not the only reason they would paint Riel as an unstable man, a man who’s insane. To do so could save not just his soul but also his life during the trial that would decide his fate. When men like Father Fourmond and Father André came to the stand during Riel’s trial, his life hung in the balance, and they indeed argued that Riel was insane.

Regardless, when the new year of 1885, the last year of his life, arrives, Louis’s ties with the priests, the men who have so shaped and anchored his world, have been severed. And this surely affects everything in his world.

But with the hard times come good times, too. A huge party is thrown in Louis’s honour on the first of January, with as many as two hundred members of the Métis community coming together at the home of Baptiste Boyer to celebrate and to show their love and respect for Louis. He has come to make a stand for them, and this party is given in the hope that the rest of the year will be just as bountiful. This will be the year when the government finally pays attention and gives due where due is deserved.

No one at this point can fathom how quickly things will slide into anarchy.

Four weeks later to the day, Dewdney, the lieutenant governor and head of the territorial government of the North-West, receives a telegram from the Halfbreed Land Claims Commission, a commission set up just recently by the federal government. It’s a curt response to the Métis petition so painstakingly crafted and debated months before. Dewdney is so taken aback by the commission’s telegram that he is shocked into understanding that sharing it with the Métis of the North-West might very well cause open rebellion. Despite the millions upon millions of acres that make up the North-West, this three-man commission sitting in Ottawa has decided that only two hundred of the approximately thirteen hundred Métis who have legitimate claim will receive any entitlement. Anyone who’d received scrip in Manitoba in the past is no longer eligible, regardless of any past impropriety on the part of the government or questionable speculators, and regardless of the fact that the Métis of Manitoba were not given choice parcels of land, land that they themselves had broken with their backs. Virtually nothing that the Métis ask for is broached, including representation in local government, the delineation of all-important river lots, or acknowledgment of Métis rights as a distinct people.

Dewdney hems and haws as to what to do, finally deciding that he’d best gut this telegram to avoid trouble. When it circuitously reaches Louis a full eleven days later, Dewdney has so altered it that it now simply says, “Government has decided to investigate claims of Half Breeds and with that view has already taken preliminary steps.”

Word travels fast, and despite Dewdney’s fabricated version being far from the answer the Métis hope for, they at least recognize it as a response, finally, from John A. He has received their petition, and it will be difficult for him to not see its simple and inalienable requests.

The excitement of the Métis, their belief that their communal voice has finally been heard by Ottawa, peaks on the evening of February 24. The people have fallen into a nearreligious fervour. Prayer marathons for guidance and for leadership, for wisdom and for the future of their people, culminate in Louis speaking to the community at the Batoche church. Louis believes that if he stays any longer, his presence will become a hindrance. It’s no secret that John A. is not a fan. Rumours circulate that the police will arrest Louis on sight. The gathered crowd gasps when he announces that it is time for him to return to his simple life teaching in Montana, that the wheels have begun to turn, and it is now best that he step aside so that they may spin freely. The church erupts into cries of disbelief, becoming a single voice of desperation, of pleading that Louis stay and help finish what he has started. Louis sees that he has no choice but to do what they ask. He is moved by their desire, and he is here not only to lead but to serve them. But he warns the gathered crowd that consequences might very well follow. The people, he sees, are willing and able. Consequences be damned. The consequence will be that the Métis will finally have a home. Louis finally has a home.

CHAPTER FIVE

Oath

For Gabriel, these last months through the winter are once again spent standing back in quiet support of Louis, but the brief happiness of February turns into the anger of March. The Métis don’t want to accept as normal the manic ups and downs that the government forces them to go through. It’s becoming a sickening pattern. If Gabriel didn’t know better, he’d swear the politicians were doing this on purpose, setting up the people’s hopes just to gut them. Four days into March, the actual words of the telegram to Dewdney and his rewriting of it become public knowledge, and with it, the brutal truth of the matter: only a tiny percentage of Métis will be offered possible title to their land and only after government land agents give their permission. Something in Gabriel hardens forever with this news. He was willing to go the peaceful route of petition, but it has gotten the people nowhere.

Had Gabriel been able to see the bigger picture unfolding—an impossibility for most anyone who didn’t have access to all the facts and all the government insider plans in 1885—it might not have been that big of a stretch for him to believe that John A. was actively attempting to incite the Métis to open rebellion by his long stretches of silence followed by short, devastating bursts of antagonistic decision-making that seem to unfairly punish them. Historians such as D.N. Sprague as well as the brilliant comic strip author Chester Brown make a fascinating argument for why it would perfectly serve John A. to incite the Métis to rebellion. John A.’s obsession, after all (an obsession, keep in mind, that forced him to resign because of his direct involvement in a railroad bribery scandal twelve years before), is a railroad that runs from sea to shining sea. But the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1885 is in desperate straits and close to bankruptcy. With the economy in the midst of a depression, Canadians worry that the project has become a fiscal black hole. But what if? What if a rebellion flares up in the west? The insurrection of 1870 is not only still fresh in the minds of English Canadians, it has grown to bogeyman proportions, and anger over the execution of the Orangeman Thomas Scott has never gone away. Riel is back in Canada, fomenting anger in the Métis, and now reports from government spies—including, of all people, Father André and the bureaucrat Lawrence Clarke—claim Riel wishes to pursue his revolutionary agenda even through violent means. And so why not just lead the Métis to water? Why not deny them what they ask for? Get them to act out violently, and what God-fearing Canadian is going to say no to loosening the purse strings in order to get the railroad finished so that troops and supplies can be sent quickly to quash the heathen uprising? Canadians will finally see the railroad’s positive use, and John A. will cement his place in the history books.

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