Peter Blue Cloud
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Peter Blue Cloud (Aroniawenrate) (1933 – 2011) was a
Mohawk Mohawk may refer to: Related to Native Americans * Mohawk people, an indigenous people of North America (Canada and New York) *Mohawk language, the language spoken by the Mohawk people * Mohawk hairstyle, from a hairstyle once thought to have been ...
poet A poet is a person who studies and creates poetry. Poets may describe themselves as such or be described as such by others. A poet may simply be the creator ( thinker, songwriter, writer, or author) who creates (composes) poems (oral or w ...
, and folklorist.


Early life

He was born June 10, 1933 of the Turtle Clan of the Mohawk Nation on the Caughnawaga Reserve in Kahnawake,
Quebec, Canada Quebec ( ; )According to the Canadian government, ''Québec'' (with the acute accent) is the official name in Canadian French and ''Quebec'' (without the accent) is the province's official name in Canadian English is one of the thirteen p ...
. He was previously associated with journal ''Akwesasne Notes'' and the journal ''Indian Magazine''. His Christian name was Peter Williams but he went by Peter Blue Cloud. The name Aroniawenrate as a nickname has been translated in English as "Stepping across the Blue Sky" or "Climbing up toward the Blue Sky". Peter Blue Cloud had pen names of Coyote 2, Owl's Child, Turtle's Son, and Kaienwaktatsie. Blue Cloud was born in Kahnawake, Mohawk Territory (Quebec), where he attended school and was raised in the Mohawk language. The family moved to Buffalo, NY, for a while before returning to Kahnawake. He got educated in grammar school on the reserve and in Buffalo. He was raised speaking the Mohawk language and later in his life learned English and French. He was a lifelong avid reader and began writing poems as a teenager. At an early age, Blue Cloud got influenced by European and American traditions. His grandfather was a school teacher at Kahnawake, exposed to the art of storytelling through the plays of William Shakespeare and the tales of Haudenosaunee. These concepts were shown throughout his work. He became an ironworker in his teens, working in various cities in the American West. In the late 1950s, he traveled to California, where he was employed as an ironworker in the Bay Area. After quitting the iron, he worked as a logger with the Haida people in the Queen Charlotte Islands of British Columbia, as a ranch hand in the vicinity of Susanville, California, and doing archaeological field work with the Paiute people of Pyramid Lake, Nevada. He lived for some time at the Maidu Bear Dance grounds near Janesville, Ca, where he absorbed the stories and teachings of Maidu elders, and where some of his first creations as a carver and sculptor emerged. Overall the jobs he worked were jobs as a carpenter, logger, ironworker, and as a woodcarver.


Career

Peter Blue Cloud was very concerned about pantribal awareness and indigenous rights. His work stood as a symbol of Native Rights in opposition to European colonization. The corrupted colonizing power by the reclamation did not go unheard. Moving back to the Bay Area, he discovered the Beat poetry and folk music scenes, and the social and political upheaval of the 60's. There he continued to develop his talents as a poet, sculptor, carver and painter, collaborated with other Native artists and writers, and participated in art exhibitions. While an artist in many genres, Blue Cloud is most known for his writing. He published several books of poetry and his poems appear in numerous anthologies and journals. He won the American Book Award for Back Then Tomorrow in 1981. He was noted for combining Native American mythology with contemporary issues, most especially the character of Coyote, the trickster who figured prominently in his stories and poems. In the city or country, Blue Cloud loved to walk, was a keen observer of events both natural and political, and incorporated them into his writings. As it did for so many Native people, the occupation of Alcatraz Island from 1969 to 1971 sparked his interest in the fight for the rights of Native Americans. He lived on the island for a while, and supported the occupation and similar events in California and the Northwest by chronicling them in various publications. Blue Cloud moved to the Sierra Nevada foothills near Nevada City for several years in the 1970s-'80's, where he continued to write, carve and paint, while also working as a carpenter. There he met guitarist Rex Richardson, and toured across the U.S. in 1979 with Richardson, who set his poems to music. Several recordings were released as a result of the collaboration. Blue Cloud returned to the East Coast to work for the national Native journal Akwesasne Notes (Mohawk territory, Akwesasne/New York) as a writer/editor first in 1975-76, and again from 1983-1985. He returned to Kahnawake in 1986, where he briefly published his own newspaper, the Kariwakoroks, before writing a column for The Eastern Door Newspaper from 1992 to 2006. Lorna Wilkes-Ruebelmann is a freelance consultant in Sheridan, WY that reviewed Peter Blue Cloud's work. She said that the imagery of indigenous Americans and the language he uses, represents the past and the present simultaneously. His images are of quiet mountaintops and country trails that contrast with New York City's high steel construction and freeways.


Death

Blue Cloud died in Montreal on April 27, 2011. Blue Cloud was cremated immediately after his death as per his wishes and his ashes will be spread in Modoc country in Northern California where the Modoc warriors fought and died.


Awards

* 1981 American Book Award, before Columbus Foundation


Works

* "Coyote, Coyote, Please Tell Me" poem * "An Arrangement" poem * "Coyote makes First People" poem * "Sketches in Winter, With Crows" poem 1984 * "Clans of Many Nations" selected poems 1969-1994 * "Back then tomorrow" short story 1978 * "Tomorrow" poem * "Alcatraz Visions" poem * "Thunderman" poem * "First Brother" poem * "Alcatraz" poem * "White Corn Sister" play 1979 * "Elderberry Flute Song; Contemporary Coyote Tales" 1982 * "Other Side of Nowhere: Contemporary Coyote Tales" 1990 * "Badger's Son", ''Haven Community'' * ''Alcatraz is not an island'', Wingbow Press, 1972 * ''Turtle, bear and wolf'', Akwesasne Notes, 1976 * ''Back then tomorrow'', Brunswick, ME : Blackberry Press, 1978 * ''The paranoid foothills: a work of fiction'', Blackberry, 1981 * * Crazy Horse Monument, 1995 * * * *


Anthologies

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References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Blue cloud, Peter 1933 births 2011 deaths 20th-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights 20th-century Canadian male writers 20th-century Canadian poets 20th-century First Nations writers American Book Award winners Canadian male dramatists and playwrights Canadian male poets Canadian Mohawk people First Nations dramatists and playwrights First Nations poets