“Your People Live Only Upon Cod”
An
Algonquian Response
to European Claims of Cultural
Superiority
From the start
of colonization, Indians and Europeans viewed each other
across a wide cultural gulf. Sure about the superiority of
their civilization, European missionaries and teachers
tried to convert Indians to Christianity and the European
way of life. Some Indians did adopt new ways after disease
and violence had decimated their communities; others
rejected the European entreaties and pointed out the
arrogance of these claims of cultural superiority.
French priest Chrestian LeClerq traveled among the eastern
Algonquian people who lived in what are now the Maritime
Provinces of Canada. He recorded a Micmac leader’s
eloquent response to these attempts at “reform”
that pointed out how difficult Europeans found it to live
in Indian country. If France was such a terrestrial
paradise, he asked, why were colonists making their way
across the Atlantic to live in the forests of North
America?
"I
am greatly astonished that the French have so little
cleverness, as they seem to exhibit in the matter of which
thou hast just told me on their behalf, in the effort to
persuade us to convert our poles, our barks, and our
wigwams into those houses of stone and of wood which are
tall and lofty, according to their account, as these trees.
Very well! But why now, do men of five to six feet in
height need houses which are sixty to eighty? For, in fact,
as thou knowest very well thyself, Patriarch—do we
not find in our own all the conveniences and the advantages
that you have with yours, such as reposing, drinking,
sleeping, eating, and amusing ourselves with our friends
when we wish?
This is not all, my brother, hast thou as much ingenuity
and cleverness as the Indians, who carry their houses and
their wigwams with them so that they may lodge wheresoever
they please, independently of any seignior whatsoever? Thou
art not as bold nor as stout as we, because when thou goest
on a voyage thou canst not carry upon thy shoulders thy
buildings and thy edifices. Therefore it is necessary that
thou prepares as many lodgings as thou makest changes of
residence, or else thou lodgest in a hired house which does
not belong to thee.
As for us, we find ourselves secure from all these
inconveniences, and we can always say, more truly than
thou, that we are at home everywhere, because we set up our
wigwams with ease wheresoever we go, and without asking
permission of anybody. Thou reproachest us, very
inappropriately, that our country is a little hell in
contrast with France, which thou comparest to a terrestrial
paradise, inasmuch as it yields thee, so thou safest, every
kind of provision in abundance. Thou sayest of us also that
we are the most miserable and most unhappy of all men,
living without religion, without manners, without honour,
without social order, and, in a word, without any rules,
like the beasts in our woods and our forests, lacking
bread, wine, and a thousand other comforts which thou hast
in superfluity in Europe.
Well, my brother, if thou dost not yet know the real
feelings which our Indians have towards thy country and
towards all thy nation, it is proper that I inform thee at
once. I beg thee now to believe that, all miserable as we
seem in thine eyes, we consider ourselves nevertheless much
happier than thou in this, that we are very content with
the little that we have; and believe also once for all, I
pray, that thou deceivest thyself greatly if thou thinkest
to persuade us that thy country is better than ours. For if
France, as thou sayest, is a little terrestrial paradise,
art thou sensible to leave it? And why abandon wives,
children, relatives, and friends? Why risk thy life and thy
property every year, and why venture thyself with such
risk, in any season whatsoever, to the storms and tempests
of the sea in order to come to a strange and barbarous
country which thou considerest the poorest and least
fortunate of the world?
Besides, since we are wholly convinced of the contrary, we
scarcely take the trouble to go to France, because we fear,
with good reason, lest we find little satisfaction there,
seeing, in our own experience, that those who are natives
thereof leave it every year in order to enrich themselves
on our shores.
We believe, further, that you are also incomparably poorer
than we, and that you are only simple journeymen, valets,
servants, and slaves, all masters and grand captains though
you may appear, seeing that you glory in our old rags and
in our miserable suits of beaver which can no longer be of
use to us, and that you find among us, in the fishery for
cod which you make in these parts, the wherewithal to
comfort your misery and the poverty which oppresses you. As
to us, we find all our riches and all our conveniences
among ourselves, without trouble and without exposing our
lives to the dangers in which you find yourselves
constantly through your long voyages.
And, whilst feeling compassion for you in the sweetness of
our repose, we wonder at the anxieties and cares which you
give yourselves night and day in order to load your ship.
We see also that all your people live, as a rule, only upon
cod which you catch among us. It is everlastingly nothing
but cod—cod in the morning, cod at midday, cod at
evening, and always cod, until things come to such a pass
that if you wish some good morsels, it is at our expense;
and you are obliged to have recourse to the Indians, whom
you despise so much, and to beg them to go a-hunting that
you may be regaled.
Now tell me this one little thing, if thou hast any sense:
Which of these two is the wisest and happiest—he who
labours without ceasing and only obtains, and that with
great trouble, enough to live on, or he who rests in
comfort and finds all that he needs in the pleasure of
hunting and fishing? It is true, that we have not always
had the use of bread and of wine which your France
produces; but, in fact, before the arrival of the French in
these parts, did not the Gaspesians live much longer than
now?
And if we have not any longer among us any of those old men
of a hundred and thirty to forty years, it is only because
we are gradually adopting your manner of living, for
experience is making it very plain that those of us live
longest who, despising your bread, your wine, and your
brandy, are content with their natural food of beaver, of
moose, of waterfowl, and fish, in accord with the custom of
our ancestors and of all the Gaspesian nation.
Learn now, my brother, once for all, because I must open to
thee my heart: there is no Indian who does not consider
himself infinitely more happy and more powerful than the
French."
Source:
William F. Ganong, trans. and ed., New Relation of
Gaspesia, with the Customs and Religion of the Gaspesian
Indians,by Chrestien LeClerq (Toronto: Champlain Society,
1910), 103–06.