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Part front matter for Part I “The Spirit of My Ancestors”
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Published:October 2017
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On Victoria Day weekend in May 2013, two fishermen, father and son, pulled their boat onshore at Cheslatta Lake in northern British Columbia. They planned to eat something, stretch their legs, maybe have a look around. After making a small fire out of driftwood, they sat on the gravel beach below a cut bank that rose about ten feet to level ground above. Soon the fishermen saw something strange. Just below the top of the bank, it looked like two bones were exposed. After father and son clambered up the slope and inspected the bones’ shape and size, it became clear that these were human remains. They knew it by the size of the bone, the shape of the shaft, the length to the condyle where the knee would be—not moose, bear, or deer, but human.
This was not the first time human remains had been discovered at Cheslatta Lake. After the Aluminum Company of Canada built Kenney Dam in the 1950s, the company used the lake to drain water from the reservoir through a spillway. Since that time, the spillway has flooded the people’s traditional cemeteries and washed up the bones, caskets, and crosses of the ancestors. So when the Cheslatta Carrier Nation was informed of this discovery on Victoria Day, the people were prepared and knew what needed to be done. Along with their non-Native allies, the Cheslatta accompanied the priest, archaeologist, and a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) television reporter to the lake. There, the Cheslatta chief offered words to the ancestors, the priest blessed the remains with holy water, and the archaeologist exhumed the bones.
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