Jeannette C. Armstrong In order to address the specifics of Native people’s writing and empowerment, I must first present my view on the disem- powerment of first North American Nations. Without recounting various historical versions of how it happened, I would like to refer only to what happened here. Indigenous peoples in North America were rendered powerless and subjugated to totalitarian domination by foreign peoples after, they were welcomed as guests and their numbers were allowed to grow to the point of domination through aggres- sion. Once total subjective control was achieved over my peoples through various coercive measures and the direct removal of political, social and religious freedoms accomplished, the coloni- zation process began. In North America this has been to systemically enforce manifest destiny or the so-called "White Man'’s burden" to civilize. In the 498 years of contact in The Americas, the thrust of this bloody sword has been to hack out the spirit of all the beautiful cultures encountered, leaving in its' wake a death toll unrivalled in recorded history. This is what happened and what continues to happen. There is no word other than totalitarianism which ade- quately describes the methods used to achieve the condition of my people today. Our people were not given choices. Our children, for generations, were seized from our communities and homes and placed in indoctrination camps until our language, our relig- ions, our customs, our values and our societal structures almost disappeared. This was the residential school experience. Arising out of the seige conditions of this nightmare time, what is commonly referred to as the "social problems" of Native peoples emerged. Homes and communities, without children had nothing to work for, or live for. Children returned to communities and families as adults, without the necessary skills for parenting, for Native life style or self-sufficiency on their land base, deterio- rated into despair. With the loss of cohesive cultural relevance with their own peoples and a distorted view of the non-native culture from the clergy whoran the residential schools, an almost total disorientation and loss of identity occurred. The disintegra- tion of family and community and nation was inevitable, originat- ing with the individual's internalized pain. Increasing death statis- tics from suicide, violence, alcohol and drug abuse and other 142