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The Walls Still Wail at Night

Based on True Events

By Oneg In The ArcticPublished about a year ago Updated about a year ago 1 min read
Top Story - October 2024
From the Archives: Residential School Architecture. The Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada.

There was only one rule: don´t open the door. If broken, everything would be risked. Our belongings, our safety, even our history.

This was the cost of our identity, of preserving who we are. And while some have brushed aside this warning, others instead chose to hide and survive.

My parents, my grandparents, and even those many generations before, had followed this rule with complete understanding and respect. They´d seen the horrors that happened to those who didn´t. But we were just curious kids, tempted by the sounds and possibilities out there. We never would have expected ghost-like demons in black robes to snatch us up like that.

They ripped off our clothes, shaved our heads, and doused us in a white powder that burned from the outside in. They beat us with fists and sticks, and left marks. And they yelled. Always yelled. As if they had never considered they could speak in any other way. Like in a soft way; a good way.

Nokoomis always spoke in a soft and good way, especially as she combed and braided our hair. She´d speak of the strength and spirit our braids carried, and how we must always look out for each other.

When they hacked off my braid I felt something in me sever, and I cried. My brother however was solid as stone, as if he had severed himself from this world.

If only we had not opened that door. If only we hadn´t ventured away from our traditions and land. If only the White Man hadn´t gotten us.

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About the Creator

Oneg In The Arctic

A queer storyteller and poet of arctic adventures, good food, identity, mental health, and more.

Co-founder of Queer Vocal Voices

Water is Life ✊

Reader insights

Nice work

Very well written. Keep up the good work!

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Comments (15)

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  • The Dani Writerabout a year ago

    Part of my reasoning for disliking horror stories/movies...we have history, the personification of terror. Skillfully written Oneg, and perfectly seasoned to make a point.

  • Caroline Cravenabout a year ago

    I was thinking nazi Germany and the holocaust when I first started to read this. What horrific things we do to each other. This was really well written. Great stuff.

  • D. ALEXANDRA PORTERabout a year ago

    This is brilliant. ✍️

  • MT Poetryabout a year ago

    It’s sad how one choice changed everything for them.

  • Lightning Bolt ⚡about a year ago

    Love it! ⚡❤️⚡

  • Sonia Heidi Unruhabout a year ago

    The greatest horrors are those done by people to others. Appreciation to you for putting this sober reminder and true history into the framework of this challenge.

  • Taimur Kazmiabout a year ago

    Breaking tradition leads to a devastating loss of identity, culture, and innocence in this powerful narrative.

  • Kelli Sheckler-Amsdenabout a year ago

    Our history isn't always flattering. Great story

  • S. A. Crawfordabout a year ago

    Wow, this one cuts really deep - even the prose feels heavy with sorrow. A terribly sad but well written piece. Well done - you create such emotion with so few words.

  • Christian Bassabout a year ago

    That goes deep, and it reminded me on the holocaust in Germany, 80+ years ago. Well written.

  • Melissa Ingoldsbyabout a year ago

    This was utterly heartbreaking, and so poignantly written. You have to place in the challenge 💝

  • Cathy holmesabout a year ago

    That was really well done, yet so sad . But then, truth often is.

  • zulfi buxabout a year ago

    Well.. what can I say Truly amazing

  • Oh geez, this is heat-wrenchingly sombre. What vision you have!

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