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[personal profile] chelidon
Many thanks to [livejournal.com profile] contentlove for linking to this wonderful and fascinating interview with Yale historian John Mack Faragher in her LJ. It's about a piece of little-known and tragic history -- the first North American example of state-sponsored ethnic cleansing, conducted by the British against the French-speaking Acadians in Nova Scotia in 1755.

I had the opportunity to take a hiking, camping and music trip to Cape Breton, Nova Scotia last May (brrr and *ahhh*), and got a chance to explore some of the remnants of Acadian culture, language and music, but what was lost in the calculated destruction of the culture by the British sounds so tantalizingly like what could have been an alternative for our interactions with the indigenous cultures we encountered as we expanded across this continent. Still, what was built in Nova Scotia lasted for 100 years, but in the end, the very political neutrality and friendliness with the indigenous people that was so extraordinary among the Acadians was what came to be seen as a threat requiring a final military solution.

Will the more ignorant, brutal and violent always, in the end, overrun and destroy or scatter those with less vicious, less hierarchical, less controlling inclinations? An ancient question, and history is not exactly encouraging in this regard -- the Diggers, the Albigensian Crusade against the Cathars, countless examples of pogroms and genocides usually for material gain sully history again and again. Still, I have to believe that a third road is possible, that oases of beauty, tolerance, egalitarianism, justice, can exist and thrive, at least for a time. History shows us that, too, even if it tends to come in brief flashes of light here and there.

No, there was no Golden Age, no paradise, no antediluvian utopia. Acadian culture certainly was not idyllic. But there are lessons there for us, messages that percolate and bubble up through history, via the tongues of dead and scattered people who fiercely believed that the world which was "normal" was not the world in which they wished to live, that coexistance and interdependance made more practical sense than engaging in an endless cycle of death, destruction, revenge, and, ultimately, genocide. If there is to be anything different, anything uncommon, extraordinary, contrary...we have to make it, here and now, with our own hands, though intentional acts, one choice at a time.

Date: 2005-03-02 03:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elnigma.livejournal.com
You probably know already Southern "Cajun" culture is partially decended from Acadians who escaped (hence the name Cajun). http://www.acadian-cajun.com/ http://www.acadian-cajun.com/sjrec.htm

Date: 2005-03-02 03:37 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elnigma.livejournal.com
I'm just going to comment, looking at the photos.. HOLY COW! that is beautiful. And that Moose didn't look real.

Date: 2005-03-02 04:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chelidon.livejournal.com
Yes, it was gorgeous, a wonderful unforgettable road trip (one of the good things about being this far north is that Nova Scotia is driveable). It was very early Spring (or late Winter, in the highlands where we were camping -- the day before we arrived they closed the pass just above our beachside campsite because of a sudden blizzard...) So we completely missed the usual tourist season, and every place we hiked to or visited we pretty much had all to ourselves.

I assure you, the moose were very real...and that momma moose was about 10 feet away at one point, when I suddenly found myself between momma and baby moose. Oh shit...move slowly perpendicular to both, no sudden movements, step away from the moose...yikes. And total exhilaration...

Knights templar and Poussin.

Date: 2005-03-05 09:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alzm.livejournal.com
You do realise that that particular statement comes from the mystery off Rennes Le Chateaux don't you?
I am conducting some minor personal research into the Templar Treeasure with ofcourse very little chance off success without real intelligent people being on my side.
As such well, I know you are not dumb, mind helping?

Re: Knights templar and Poussin.

Date: 2005-03-07 06:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chelidon.livejournal.com
Oh, I can be as dumb as anyone, but what did you have in mind?

Re: Knights templar and Poussin.

Date: 2005-03-07 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alzm.livejournal.com
Well, it's a long story if you want the tale being backed up by the reaosning behind it but basically I want to figure out where the knights templar hid their treasure.. :)
As to why?
I don't have a dishonorable reason for it....................................................
So far, this is how far I got.
Various different pieces off the puzzle point out the following after a day or two of puzzling it out with the internet...
To find the treasure be wise!
Here is me thinking I was.
If a whole crowd of people where to give me the real opinion on this matter it would be a collective ARGH!
As to your dumbness, I hope to God it's not as excessive.
Mind helping please?
If we do, world wide Acclaim:)
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