Medicine Walk

by

Richard Wagamese

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Identity and Heritage Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Fathers and Sons Theme Icon
Nature and the Land Theme Icon
Identity and Heritage Theme Icon
Memory and Story Theme Icon
Love, Loss, and Grief Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Medicine Walk, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Identity and Heritage Theme Icon

Franklin Starlight grows up knowing he is half Indian. But his guardian, the old man, isn’t Indian, and he only has irregular contact with his biological father, which means that he doesn’t know much about his heritage. In his early life, the kid’s primary connection to being indigenous comes through feeling somewhat alienated and rejected by his non-native classmates. Even his Ojibway surname, “Starlight,” holds no special meaning for him, and the old man can only teach him vague ideas about native ways. When Eldon is dying, he admits to the kid that he was always too busy trying to survive to learn much about his culture, and he can only tell him bits and pieces about his own and Franklin’s mother’s past. Between the old man’s efforts, Eldon’s deathbed stories, and an unexpected encounter with a native woman named Becka, both Frank and Eldon arrive at a fuller, if still incomplete, sense of their cultural identity. The novel suggests that one’s ethnic and cultural heritage is important to understand, though it’s not always possible for such heritage to be passed down in a comprehensive, traditional way—sometimes it comes to a person through indirect and unexpected connections.

Frank grows up unconnected to his biological heritage, but the old man does his best to provide him with a sense of it. When Frank makes his first kill, the old man marks Frank’s cheeks with the deer’s blood to symbolize his connection to the animal. Frank knows that the old man does this “Because I'm Indian.” The old man adds, “Cuz I'm not […] I can't teach you nothing about bein' who you are, Frank. All's I can do is show you to be a good person.” The old man knows there’s only so much he can do to convey a sense of Frank’s Native heritage. He teaches Frank the bits he knows—like encouraging Frank to respect the animal whose life he’s just taken—in hopes that, even if it’s inadequate culturally, it’ll add up to Frank being a good man someday.

The old man also takes Frank to visit some sacred painted rocks, figuring that though he doesn’t know their meaning, they’ll teach Frank something about who he is. Frank later tells his father, “I spent three days here once when I was thirteen. Sorta thought if I spent enough time studying them drawings I could figure out what they were supposed to tell me.” Though he still isn’t sure what the pictures are telling him, he feels pulled to remember them in case everyone else forgets. His understanding of his heritage is piecemeal and beyond his reach in some ways, yet maintaining an awareness of it—however inadequate—seems to be worth doing in its own right.

Unlike Frank, Eldon grows up mostly surrounded by his Ojibway family, but fails to connect with his heritage. When he visits the painted rocks with Frank, Eldon says that thinking about “Indian stuff” never seemed to contribute to survival, so he didn’t bother. “Most of the time I was just tryin' to survive,” he tells Frank. “Stories never seemed likely to keep a guy goin'.” Eldon never saw much inherent value in understanding his heritage. Ironically, he learns about it from his son rather than the reverse.

Frank learns about the origin of his name indirectly, too. Eldon tells him that his childhood friend Jimmy taught him his surname’s connection to old Ojibway legends of the Star People. “I never even knew where my name came from,” he admits to Frank. “Never thought to ask. When I told [Jimmy] that he got right upset […] He said that a man oughta know why he's called what he is.” In their focus on survival, Frank’s family has forgotten significant parts of their heritage. While the wider community can help supply what’s missing, that lack of knowledge can never be made up completely.

Becka, who was raised with Indian ways, models a more well-rounded way of connecting to one’s heritage. When Eldon and Frank spend the night with Becka, Eldon criticizes Becka’s offering of food to the spirits of her ancestors, calling it “witchcraft” and “a waste of good food.” Becka’s practices are unfamiliar and pointless to Eldon, while for Becka, they’re woven into the practices of daily life.

Because of her background, Becka understands better than Frank what Eldon is trying to do by seeking to die in the “warrior way.” She tells Frank, “He don't savvy spirit talk. So I know he ain't been schooled in traditional ways. […] So now he figures that goin' out in some kinda honourable fashion is gonna fetch him some peace way yonder.” Though Becka seems dubious that Eldon will find the peace he seeks, she recognizes that he’s now trying to connect with an aspect of himself that’s important, even if he’s coming around to it late in life.

Though neither Frank nor Eldon has the benefit of a life spent immersed in traditional ancestral ways, they both embrace aspects of this identity to the extent that they can. Eldon is unaware and skeptical of aspects of Indian culture, but his choice to be buried as a warrior reflects the fact that some connection to heritage is worth seeking, even at the last possible opportunity in life. Frank’s cultural heritage has been almost entirely indirect, but reconnecting with his father—even though Eldon doesn’t know much about Ojibway culture either—seems to help him arrive at a sense of himself that’s more whole. At the end of the book, Frank envisions his Ojibway ancestors traveling across Bunky’s land, suggesting that he feels more connected to his Indian identity than he did at the beginning of the book.

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Identity and Heritage ThemeTracker

The ThemeTracker below shows where, and to what degree, the theme of Identity and Heritage appears in each chapter of Medicine Walk. Click or tap on any chapter to read its Summary & Analysis.
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Identity and Heritage Quotes in Medicine Walk

Below you will find the important quotes in Medicine Walk related to the theme of Identity and Heritage.
Chapter 1 Quotes

The old man had taught him the value of work early and he was content to labour, finding his satisfaction in farm work and his joy in horses and the untrammelled open of the high country. He'd left school as soon as he was legal. He had no mind for books and out here where he spent the bulk of his free time there was no need for elevated ideas or theories or talk and if he was taciturn he was content in it, hearing symphonies in wind across a ridge and arias in the screech of hawks and eagles, the huff of grizzlies and the pierce of a wolf call against the unblinking eye of the moon. He was Indian.

Related Characters: The kid (Franklin Starlight), The old man (Bunky)
Page Number: 4
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

"I want you to take me out into that territory you come through. The one you hunted all your life. There's a ridge back forty mile. Sits above a narrow valley with a high range behind it, facing east […] Because I need you to bury me there."

The kid sat with the coffee cup half raised to his mouth and he felt the urge to laugh and stand up and walk out and head back to the old farm. But his father looked at him earnestly and he could see pain in his eyes and something leaner, sorrow maybe, regret, or some ragged woe tattered by years.

Related Characters: Eldon Starlight (father) (speaker), The kid (Franklin Starlight)
Page Number: 21
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

“Least ways, you got this place and we get out to where it's real as much as can, don't we?"

"Yeah," the kid said. "That's what saves my bacon."

[…]

They'd take horses and cross the field and plod up the ridge and by the time they were down the other side the land became what the old man called "real." To the kid, real meant quiet, open, and free before he learned to call it predictable and knowable. To him, it meant losing schools and rules and distractions and being able to focus and learn and see. To say he loved it was a word beyond him then but he came to know the feeling.

Related Characters: The kid (Franklin Starlight) (speaker), The old man (Bunky) (speaker)
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:

When the slash was made the old man drew a smear of blood with two fingers and turned the kid's face to him with the other hand. He made a pair of lines with the blood on each of his cheeks and another on his chin and a wavy line across his forehead. His face was calm and serious. "Them's your marks," he said.

The kid nodded solemnly. "Because I'm Indian," he said.

"Cuz I'm not," the old man said. "I can't teach you nothing about bein' who you are, Frank. All's I can do is show you to be a good person. A good man. You learn to be a good man, you'll be a good Injun too. Least ways, that's how I figure it works.

Related Characters: The kid (Franklin Starlight) (speaker), The old man (Bunky) (speaker)
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“All's I'm tryin' to say is that we never had the time for learnin' about how to get by out here. None of us did. White man things was what we needed to learn if we was gonna eat regular. Indian stuff just kinda got left behind on accounta we were busy gettin' by in that world."

"So I don't get what we're doin' out here then."

[…]

"I owe," he said,

"Yeah, I heard that before."

"I'm tired, Frank."

[…]

"That's the first time you ever called me by my name."

Related Characters: The kid (Franklin Starlight) (speaker), Eldon Starlight (father) (speaker)
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Then he strode off and returned in a short time with mushrooms and greens and berries that he crushed up and fashioned into a paste. He gathered a clump of it on a stick of alder and held it out to his father.

[…]

"Sometimes I'll put some pine resin in with it if I got a pot and a fire. Makes a good soup. Lots of good stuff in there."

"Old man?"

"Yeah. At first he brung me out all the time when I was small. Showed me plants and how to gather them. Everything a guy would need is here if you want it and know how to look for it, he said. You gotta spend time gatherin' what you need. What you need to keep you strong. He called it a medicine walk."

Related Characters: The kid (Franklin Starlight) (speaker), Eldon Starlight (father) (speaker)
Page Number: 64
Explanation and Analysis:

“Near as I can figure they're stories. I reckon some are about travelling. That's how they feel to me. Others are about what someone seen in their life. The old man doesn't think anyone ever figured them out."

"Ain't a powerful lotta good if ya can't figure 'em out."

The kid shrugged. "I sorta think you gotta let a mystery be a mystery for it to give you anything. You ever learn any Indian stuff?"

His father lowered his gaze. […] "Nah," he said finally. "Most of the time I was just tryin' to survive. Belly fulla beans beats a head fulla thinkin'. Stories never seemed likely to keep a guy goin'. Savvy?"

"I guess," the kid said. "Me, I always wanted to know more about where I come from."

Related Characters: The kid (Franklin Starlight) (speaker), Eldon Starlight (father) (speaker)
Page Number: 69
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

"Jimmy used to say we're a Great Mystery. Everything. Said the things they done, those old-time Indians, was all about learnin' to live with that mystery. Not solving it, not comin' to grips with it, not even tryin' to guess it out. Just bein' with it. I guess I wish I'da learned the secret to doing that. […] I never belonged nowhere, Frank. Never belonged nowhere or to nobody," he said.

Related Characters: Eldon Starlight (father) (speaker), The kid (Franklin Starlight), Jimmy Weaseltail
Page Number: 149
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 26 Quotes

He closed his eyes for a moment and when he looked down into the valley again he thought he could see the ghostly shapes of people riding horses through the trees. […]

He watched them ride into the swale and ease the horses to the water while the dogs and children ran in the rough grass. The men and women on horseback dismounted and their shouts came to him laden with hope and good humour. He raised a hand to the idea of his father and mother and a line of people he had never known, then mounted the horse and rode back through the glimmer to the farm where the old man waited, a deck of cards on the scarred and battered table.

Related Characters: The kid (Franklin Starlight), Eldon Starlight (father), Angie Pratt
Page Number: 246
Explanation and Analysis: