By
Mike Youds
March
16, 2013
His native name was Dacajeweiah, or Splitting the Sky, a
name that John Boncore took to heart through a lifetime of political activism.
A Chase resident, Boncore, 61, was found dead on Wednesday
on a path on the Adams Lake Indian Reserve near his home. He is believed to
have fallen on cement steps and may have suffered a blow to the head.
Chase RCMP handed over the sudden-death investigation to
coroner Terry Dixon.
“We don’t suspect foul play,” said Const. Jonathan Spooner.
“We found nothing criminal or suspicious.”
Results of an autopsy won’t be known for some time, said
Boncore’s wife, Sandra Bruderer.
Boncore is also survived by his six children, five
grandchildren and an extended family back east. As well, he leaves a
considerable legacy of civil disobedience that earned him recognition around
the world.
Also known as John Hill, or Dac for short, Boncore will be
remembered as an individual who stood up for all that he saw as tyranny and
injustice. He shouted from the ramparts for native peoples, principally, but
also for humanity as a whole. He made headlines four years ago as the man who
was arrested trying to make a citizen’s arrest of U.S. President George W. Bush
on a visit to Calgary four years ago.
More recently, Boncore had galvanized native resistance in
northern B.C. to the proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline.
“Believe it or not, a lot of people in Alberta are very
concerned about the pipeline,” said Larry McKillop, a Calgary friend. “John was
a bit of a hero to us.”
“He was never cut and dried,” Bruderer said on Friday.
According to a biography penned a decade ago by John Steinbach,
Boncore’s early life sowed the seeds of his activist spirit. He was born in New
York City of Mohawk/Cree and Italian-American parents. His father, a painter,
and 11 other co-workers died in 1958 after they were sent into a storage tank
at U.S. Rubber without respirators. The family was left destitute. Boncore and
his five siblings were forcibly removed from their mother and sent into foster
care.
Boncore found it degrading and oppressive, and was soon
branded as incorrigible. He wound up living in the street. He robbed a store in
desperation and was sentenced to four years in prison on his first conviction.
At 19, he landed in Attica Prison, notorious for brutality
and overcrowding, and he became the leader of the bloodiest prison revolt in
U.S. history. Despite a lack of evidence, Boncore was sentenced to another 20
years and narrowly escaped execution over the death of a prison guard. He
survived several assassination attempts on the inside before being pardoned in
1979.
Boncore became active in the anti-nuclear and American
Indian movements in the 1980s and ’90s. It would take a book to describe all of
his exploits, and he wrote one with Bruderer a few years ago. It’s called From
Attica to Gustafsen Lake. He was one of the sundancers caught in a standoff
with police near 100 Mile House in 1995.
He was also an actor in recent years with roles in the TV
series Men In Trees and Da Vinci’s City Hall,, and in films including The Last
Rites of Ransom Pride and Deepwater, shot in Clearwater in 2005.
The man had a knack for uniting people in resistance to
authority.
"The thing about it, I'd been a public speaker for 32
years,” he told The Daily News in 2006. “I'd spoken at all of the major
colleges, at Yale and Harvard. I'd had thousands of public speaking
engagements. I was able to bring people to their feet. I'm a fiery
deliverer."
RIP brother, you will be missed. I enjoyed listening to your poems and though we never met in this life; I look forward to meeting you on the other side.
ReplyDeleteI met Doc in Vancouver many years ago, nice guy and of course a great man, what a loss. I find the story around his death to be strange, he seemed to be lean and in great shape still at age 61. What fortune for the government -with the Enbridge deal in the works, and it looking to be a hot summer with Idle No More organizing across the country- to lose such an inspiring leader.
ReplyDeleteIt is also interesting that they ruled out foul play almost immediately. It IS possible to do so however I suppose if it was remote.... but I did find that rather suspicious. Like when some Mossad clown identified bin Laden as the criminal behind 911 as the towers were still falling.
ReplyDeleteWe might never know. This was a very bad week for activism in terms of such losses.