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Current
Issue
COVER
New
Book Celebrates Native Comic Strip
BEE
IN THE BONNET
Shot
in the Ass!
Rich
Man, Poor Man
CULTURE
Lac Ste. Anne Pilgrimage
Draws Thousands
Metis Celebrate
History at Historic Site
CRIME
Squamish
Native Stabbed in Park
EDUCATION
Native
Teens Win Millennium
Scholarship Awards
HEALTH
Fort Chip
Natives Oppose More Oil Business
MISSING WOMEN
Pickton
Case Will Take Several Trials
MODERN TREATIES
First
Urban Treaty up for Approval
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New Book
Celebrates Native Comic Strip
By Rick Littlechild
Story telling is a tradition among First Nations, handed down from generation
to generation, the elders carry the stories that have been told in front
of campfires and in tepees a thousand years ago and are retold in homes
and friendship centers in the new millennium.
Thomas King and Eden Robinson are representative of a new generation of
novelists, their stories are written by and about Native people and are
reaching an audience that goes beyond a First Nations demographic. Chad
Solomon is an illustrator who has created a comic strip know as RABBIT
AND BEAR PAWS, he celebrates the Native oral tradition not with prose
but with a illustrated novel based on two mischievous Ojibwa brothers.
The graphic novel has just been released, it is set in the 18th century
and follows the stories of the brothers as they lay pranks and have amazing
adventures using a traditional Ojibwa medicine that transforms them into
animals for a short time.
Chad developed the stories along with writer Christopher Myer and the
guidance of his Community Elders, the stories are based upon the teachings
of the Seven Grandfathers ( Wisdom from the Anishinabek community) and
convey a entertaining tapestry of Native traditions and oral history.
He is from the Henvey Inlet band and moved to Toronto an obsessed self
taught graphic illustrator.
He worked with Ty Templeton of BATMAN fame and slowly found his own niche
before coming up with RABBIT AND BEAR PAWS.
The association for Native development in the Performing & Visual
Arts selected RABBIT AND BEAR PAWS as one of the native representatives
in the 9th Annual Fine Arts Exhibit being held at the Roger's Skydome
in Toronto November 26. RABBIT AND BEARPAWS was selected for representing
the theme of the Fine Arts Exhibit this year which is '' SEEING IN A SACRED
MANNER; THE SHAPES OF ALL THINGS.
''Then I was standing on the highest mountain of them all, but anywhere
is the center of the world and round about beneath me was the whole hoop
of the world. And while I stood there I saw more than I can tell and I
understood more than I saw; for I was seeing in a sacred manner the shapes
of all things in the spirit, and the shapes of all shapes as they must
live together like one being.
And I say the sacred hoop of my people was one of the many hoops that
made one circle, wide as daylight and as starlight, and in the center
grew one mighty flowering tree to shelter all the children of one mother
and one father. And I saw that it was holy
''
The comic strip has been printed monthly in the community papers of Anishinabek
News and Niiji Circle and now is available for the first time in book
form. Chad is the grandson of native traditional healer and justice activist
Art Solomon, he found commercil success in 2003 with the release of two
children's fairytales, ''Pied Piper' and the '' Ten Commandments.
Chad became aware that there were no cool comic book stories for the young
people of his own Native community and that many of those representions
of the personalities and cultures of the native people in existing books
were often negative sterotypes. With RABBIT AND BEAR PAWS, Chad has succeeded
in creating a positive image for Native youth.
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