The result is that Saul grows into an aggressive and embittered man-so much so that he’s kicked out of the NHL in spite of his enormous talent as a hockey player. But eventually, their cruelty proves too overwhelming for him, and he gives in to the (very understandable) temptation to fight back. For a time, Saul is able to ignore the racism of his teachers and hockey opponents. But it’s clear that racism ruins some of his potential in life by leaving him angry and frustrated. The cumulative effect of years of racism and prejudice on Saul is almost incalculable. As a result, Saul’s white opponents try to compensate by asserting their power in other ways. In other words, Saul is evidently better than they are at hockey, which is an important sport in Canada, and a traditionally European sport, which makes Saul’s success even more humiliating for them. After particularly humiliating defeats, white hockey players or racist townspeople take out their anger on Saul and his Indigenous Canadian teammates. Saul is a talented hockey player who regularly defeats his bigger, more privileged white opponents. In a similar sense, most of the white Canadians who hit and bully Saul are motivated by their own failures. Of course, the indigenous students are not, in fact, inferior to whites, and so the teachers use violence to force them into submission. These teachers regularly tell Saul and his classmates that their indigenous culture is inferior to white Canadian culture. Jerome’s Christian school, he’s beaten and abused by the racist white teachers. This racism seems to spring from an irrational need on the part of white Canadians to prove that Indigenous Canadians are inferior to them. All these behaviors stem from the fact that Saul is an Indigenous Canadian living in a country run by white people, many of whom believe that Saul is inherently inferior because of his race. And finally, he experiences his share of direct violence from racist whites who try to beat him into submission. Saul experiences a huge amount of direct, verbal racism from white peers and sports opponents, who never miss an opportunity to call him names. Then there’s the condescending racism of sports journalists who call him a “crazy redskin” and other belittling terms, even when they’re praising his prowess. Jerome’s, and forbidden from speaking his own native tongue-i.e., the suggestion that his entire society is inferior to white Canadian society. There’s the racism implicit in his being kidnapped, sent to St. In Indian Horse, Saul Indian Horse experiences many different forms and degrees of racial prejudice.
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