Lee Maracle, revolutionary Indigenous author and poet, dead at 71 - Action News
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British Columbia

Lee Maracle, revolutionary Indigenous author and poet, dead at 71

Poet, author and teacher Lee Maracle has died in Surrey, B.C., at the age of 71. The award-winning writer and esteemed mentor garnered worldwide attention for her powerful writing and life-long efforts to fight Indigenous oppression in Canada.

In time, we will 'look back on her legacy and see just how revolutionary she was,' says author Waubgeshig Rice

Lee Maracle, the poet, author, activist and instructor known for her powerful writing and efforts to fight Indigenous oppression in Canada, has died in Surrey, B.C., at the age of 71. (Lee Maracle/Facebook)

Poet, author and teacher Lee Maracle has died in Surrey, B.C., at the age of 71.

The award-winning writer and esteemed mentor garnered worldwide attention for her powerful writing and life-long efforts to fight Indigenous oppression in Canada.

Tributes are pouring into Maracle's social media page, honouring her life's work and her untiring energy to mentor other Indigenous writers.

Family members confirmed that Maracle died in Surrey Memorial Hospital early Nov. 11.

Sid Bobb says his mother was many things: "a wondrous warrior and a loving love" who dedicated her life to helping others rise from poverty and inequality.

Maracle's works includedRavensong, Bobbi Lee: Indian Rebel, A Native Perspective on Sociology and Feminism and My Conversations With Canadians.

Maracle with author Waubgeshig Rice, who says she mentored him as a younger writer. 'Today there is a wave of revolutionary Indigenous literature because of the splash Lee Maracle created decades ago,' he tweeted. (Waubgeshig Rice/Twitter)

A supportive, but critical 'auntie'

Award-winning Ontario author Waubgeshig Rice said it wasan immense, heart-breaking loss that Maracle, asupportive but critical "auntie" who helped guide him as a young writer, is now gone.

Rice said he read Maracle's work as a teenager and youngwriter, then met her at a reading in his 30s and saidshe never missed one of his book launches.

"She has been there every step of my literary journey," said Rice. "I don't think she got the credit she deserved in the wider area of Canadian literature. I think that was because she was an Indigenous woman.

"Hopefully everybody will be able to look back on her legacy and see just how revolutionary she was."

Maracle won numerous literary awards for her works and her novel Celia's Song was short-listed for the 2020Neustadt International Prize for Literature, one of the world's most prestigious literary awards. Previous Canadian nominees include Nobel Prize for Literature winner Alice Munro and Rohinton Mistry, who won the Neustadt in 2012.

Maracle's novel Celia's Song was shortlisted for the 2020 Neustadt International Prize for Literature. (Columpa Bobb, Cormorant Books)

Maracle 'demanded integrity'

Before her academic rise Maracle grew up on the North Shore of Vancouver, where Bobbsaidthere were "hard times" for his mother a member of the St:l Nation and daughter of a Mtis mother and Coast Salish father.

Maracle, a former University of Toronto professor and elder in residence had recently returned toB.C., where shehadaccepted a position at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in Surreyand began teaching in September, according to her family.

But her daughters posted on social media that she had health issues and had been hospitalized earlier this month.

Maracle, a mother of four, was also a loving grandmother and an ardent gardener, according toBobb.

"She was a tremendous person full of integrity and demanded integrity everywhere she went," he said.

Maracle was the granddaughter of Tsleil-Waututh chief Dan George, an artist and writer who rose to fame as an actor and wasOscar-nominated for his roleopposite Dustin Hoffman in Little Big Man in 1970.

Bobb says his mother fought for many ofthe same things that her grandfather often spoke about.

"Dan George, her 'pappy,' my great grandfather, said that if you are living in Salish territory then you are a Salish citizen and you are either a good citizen or a bad citizen. That really shook me that our concept of citizenship is so much more grand than the Indian Act and some of the present conversations."

Maracle, a member of the St:l Nation, was a mother of four, a loving grandmother and an ardent gardener. (Lee Maracle/Facebook)