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Anahareo

Anahareo (ca. 1928)
Born
Gertrude Bernard

(1906-06-18)June 18, 1906
DiedJune 17, 1986(1986-06-17) (aged 79)
Resting placeAjawaan Lake, Prince Albert National Park, Saskatchewan
CitizenshipCanadian
Known foranimal rights conservationist
Spouse
Count Eric Moltke-Huitfeldt
(m. 1939; died 1963)
PartnerGrey Owl
Children3
AwardsOrder of Canada

Gertrude Bernard CM (June 18, 1906 – June 17, 1986), commonly known as Anahareo, was a writer, animal rights activist and conservationist of Algonquin and Mohawk ancestry.

Biography[edit]

Gertrude Bernard was born in Mattawa, Ontario, on June 18, 1906. Her mother, Mary Nash Ockiping, was Algonquin. Her father, Matthew Bernard, was Algonquin and Mohawk. She grew up a strongly independent girl and young woman, and was described as something of a tomboy. Her father nicknamed her "Pony".[1]

When Bernard was 19, she met Archibald Belaney at a vacation lodge, Camp Wabikon, on Lake Temagami, Canada, where she was working as a waitress and he as a guide. Almost twice her age at 36, Belaney, who would come to be known as Grey Owl, claimed to be the son of a Scottish man and an Apache woman and to have been born in Mexico.[2] As they got to know one another, she insisted on accompanying him to his traplines.[3] She did not approve of the way he was living, and encouraged him to stop his trapping activities and become an animal rights activist.[3]

Anahareo and a beaver
Anahareo and a beaver

In Pilgrims of the Wild (1934), Belaney recounts how Anahareo, by saving the lives of two beaver kits and raising them, led him to change his way of life and to work for the protection of wildlife.[4] They considered themselves married, albeit informally,[1] despite the fact he was still legally married to his first wife Angele Egwuna. They had one daughter, Dawn, born in 1932.[5]

The couple split up in 1936.[5] Belaney died in 1938, a best-selling author. Shortly after his death, it was publicly revealed that he was not part-Apache as he had claimed, but an Englishman named Archibald Stansfeld Belaney. In 1940 Bernard, using the name Anahareo that Belaney had given her, wrote a book called My Life With Grey Owl with the encouragement of Belaney's publisher, Lovat Dickson. She was dissatisfied with it, in part because her lack of control over the final publication; it stereotyped her, as she put it, as "a sweet gentle Indian maiden."[1] In 1972, she wrote the best-seller, Devil in Deerskins: My Life With Grey Owl, in which she denied having known Belaney's true origins. She said she had been hurt to discover his deception.[1]

In June, 1937, Anahareo gave birth to a second daughter, Ann. The father's name did not appear on the birth certificate and she never publicly stated who the father was.[6]

In 1939, she married a Swedish nobleman, Count Eric Axel Moltke-Huitfeldt, who had immigrated to Canada. They had one daughter, Katharine.[7] Her husband died in 1963.[8] Over the 50 years following her separation from Belaney, Anahareo, as she is now better known, continued to be active in the conservation and animal rights movement. In 1979 she was admitted into the Order of Nature of the Paris-based International League of Animal Rights. She was elected a Member of the Order of Canada in 1983. On June 17, 1986, just a day before her 80th birthday, Anahareo died in Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada.[1]

Anahareo's writings[edit]

  • My Life With Grey Owl (1940)
  • Devil in Deerskins: My Life with Grey Owl (1972)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Anahareo [Gertrude Bernard] (2014). Devil in Deerskins: My Life with Grey Owl (Edited and with an Afterword by Sophie McCall ed.). Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-88755-765-1.
  2. ^ Anahareo [Gertrude Bernard] (2014). Devil in Deerskins: My Life with Grey Owl (Edited and with an Afterword by Sophie McCall ed.). Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press. pp. 1ff. ISBN 978-0-88755-765-1.
  3. ^ a b "Mattawa woman Grey Owl's inspiration", PastForward, 16 Jun 2000
  4. ^ Grey Owl [Archibald Belaney] (1971). Pilgrims of the Wild. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 23–24.
  5. ^ a b Smith, Donald B. (1990). From the Land of Shadows: The Making of Grey Owl. Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books. pp. 112. ISBN 0-88833-347-1.
  6. ^ Gleeson, Kristin (2012). "Chapter 14: Difficult Choices". Anahareo: A Wilderness Spirit. Tucson: Fireship Press.
  7. ^ "Anahareo Family Fonds, finding aid; the Glenbow Museum > Archives Main Catalogue Search Results". ww2.glenbow.org. Archived from the original on 2020-05-27. Retrieved 2019-02-18.
  8. ^ "Anahareo today". The Ottawa Citizen. 1980-05-24. Retrieved 2021-09-04.

Further reading[edit]

  • Kristin Gleeson: Anahareo: A Wilderness Spirit. Fireship Press, Tucson 2012 ISBN 1611792207
  • Kristin Gleeson: Blazing Her Own Trail: Anahareo's Rejection of Euro-Canadian Stereotypes, in Recollecting: Lives of Aboriginal Women of the Canadian Northwest and Borderlands, edited by Sarah Carter, Patricia McCormack, Athabasca University Press, 2010. The publication has won the Canadian Historical Association's Aboriginal history book prize, 2011

External links[edit]