in himself. But, as our people would say, I wasn’t ready. Yet he kept recurring in my mind. The more I thought about him, the more he reminded me, in certain respects, of the place and situation of the North American Indian in Canadian society. It was assumed that Uncle David didn’t know much about anything, or what he knew didn’t count; what North American Indians knew didn’t amount to a jar of jelly beans, and did not have any larger relevance. As long as Uncle David stayed where he belonged and didn’t bother anyone or interfere with anyone’s business, neighbors could put up with him; and as long as North American Indians kept the peace and didn’t rock the boat, society could tolerate them. Uncle David didn’t belong in the community. He wasn’t one of the normal human beings; he was dumb and couldn’t talk; didn’t and couldn’t understand. He didn’t belong in the society of sensible people. He belonged in some insti- tution where he could learn to perform simple tasks and operations. Some day he might have learned to help himself and earn a place at the bottom of the totem pole, or the ladder. Indians didn’t belong in Canadian society. They were wild. They were more at home in the forest and in the open prairies, with bears and gophers. Some even believed that Indians came from somewhere in Asia. They didn’t understand or practice Western European tradi- tions. They belonged in an institution where they would be super- vised, tolerated, and modified before they could be admitted into the larger civilized society. Reserves ostensibly were created to protect the Indians from the encroachment of settlers and unscrupulous speculators, swindlers, and other riffraff; to wean them from their traditional pursuits and pagan beliefs and practices; to groom them for farming and the trades, for the exercise of self-government and democracy, and for conversion to and espousal of Christian beliefs; and to earn them a place among the citizens of the country. Indians, it was taken for granted, were as children in the under- standing of and exercise of civilized institutions, and needed the guidance and the protection of a Great White Father and a Great White Mother to nurture and tutor them to the point where they could look after themselves and their communities, like their more accomplished neighbors. When the Canadian government under- 1l