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Indigenous

Short doc to investigate tale of 2 Mohawk boys who faked their deaths to avoid residential school

There's a story passed downin a KahnawakeMohawk family that one summer in the 1930s, two teenage boys faked their deaths by jumping off the railway bridge that connects the community to LaSalle, Que.Kaniehtiio Horn and Roxann Whitebean are making a short documentary about the tale.

Kaniehtiio Horn and Roxann Whitebean making a documentary about family story

A man stands on the train tracks leading to the Saint-Laurent Railway Bridge that connects Kahnawake to LaSalle, Que. ( Kanienkeh:ka Onkwawn:na Raotitihkwa Language and Cultural Center - Photography Archive)

There's a story passed downin a KahnawakeMohawk family that one summer in the 1930s, two teenage boys faked their deaths by jumping off the railway bridge that connects the community to LaSalle, Que.

As the story goes, two years laterthe boys returned to Kahnawake and regaled the community with the tale that they had hopped a train to the United States and joined the circus.

"It's a story I grew up hearing," saidKaniehtiio Horn.

"I heard that when my grandfather was 14 years old, he and his nephew faked their death or fell off the train bridge in Kahnawake."

The story is now thefocus of a short documentary that Horn is working on with Roxann Whitebean, a writer, director and producer from Kahnawake.

Kaniehtiio Horn's grandfather Joe Horn, left, in 1953. He and his nephew and best friend Joe Horne, were both iron workers. (Submitted by Kaniehtiio Horn)

Horngrew up in Kahnawake and Ottawa as the youngest of seven sisters. She graduatedfrom Dawson College with a theatre arts degree in 2005 and has been working as an actor since. She has most recently appeared inthe National Geographic series Barkskins andin the comedy series Letterkenny. She also hosts a podcast calledCoffee with my Ma.

Hornnever knew her grandfather because he diedbefore she was born. She first heard the story as a teen and as she got older, she wondered why he ran away.

Whitebean was familiar with the story, having heard it from Horn's mother. At the imagineNATIVE film and media arts festival in Toronto last fall Horn and Whitebeanbegan to chat about the story and turning it into a screenplay.

"If your grandfather runs away and joins the circus in the 1930s, I want to see that movie," saidHorn.

"I want to go to the theatre and watch that;I want to see our representation out there."

Not having hadthe chance to spend time withher grandfather, she wanted to learnmore about him and their familyto learn more about herself and what her history is.

Kaniehtiio Horn is piecing together a story about her grandfather faking his death with his nephew to avoid going to residential school. (CBC)

Whitebean agreed to start looking into scriptwriting grants.

"Then we were talking about how maybe we should document our process in uncovering some of the information that we're going to share in our screenplay, because a lot of the people who are sharing this information are elderly and it's really good to hear these stories firsthand," saidWhitebean.

So they decided to start with a short documentary.

Family gathering

Before starting their work, Horn and Whitebean wanted to make surethey were going to be telling the story in an appropriate way and had the support ofthe families.

"We want to tell it right. We have no intention of like airing dirty laundry, triggering traumas or anything like that," saidHorn.

They brought together family members from both of the boys' familiesfor dinner and to spend time telling stories and getting to know each other.

"We don't do that anymore;we don't gather with each other and share these stories anymore," saidHorn.

"We need to continue to share these stories."

Roxann Whitebean is a writer, director and producer from Kahnawake, Que. (Submitted by Roxann Whitebean)

As Horn describes it, without giving too many details away, the two boys faked their death to avoid being taken away to residential school.Her grandfather was 14 at the time and his nephew was a year older. They hopped a trainto the United States and joined a circus for two years until they were too old to be forced to attend school.

There are, of course, questions surrounding the validity of the story.

"For a split second, we were like, 'Did they even run away and it just evolved into this insane story?'" saidHorn.

The short documentary is expected to be finished in the spring and the screenplay to follow.