Sioux Lookout seems to possess far too many amputees, refugees, folks with spent gazes and lost body language. Its dysfunctions are evident on court dockets, in hospital notices warning against sanitizer theft, in the surfeit of well-padded police officers who attend to haul off the drunks seeking warmth in the old bank lobby. Too many people with nowhere to go, or else desperate to be gone. But despite such indicia, the town cannot be cast off as wart or war zone. Its wounds and indignities are not shared equally, of course; it is not a gross overestimate to suggest that half the population earns a handsome keep tending to the other half's frailties. But perhaps because we are so small, our problems so manifest and distilled, Sioux Lookout is also a nest of remarkable, even exemplary responses to social ills.
The connections I touch here astound me - the tight, if fraught, relationships between people, both here and in the small communities in its surrounding vastness, threads cinching geography and time. Sundered lives are stitched within strong family webs, where great need and great capacity telescope together. The leathery drunk weaving on the sidewalk outside the courthouse, I discover, is my client's father, the same man he spoke about with rage and tenderness. A man who, at one time, held positions of great authority within their band. The next morning introduces me to this same client's daughter, shackled in the courthouse cells, and a flood of other family members who mobilize to set her free. Hands and voices span across the massive territory, phone calls seek out helpful aunts, nephews drive eight hours to bring elders into court. These old ones sigh and chuckle that they've been leaned against before, stood firm in times worse than this.
All this happens in the face of a parallel manoeuvring, that of witnesses and no contact orders, medical reports and forensic notes: I foresee, with one eye, a case likely to proceed to trial, while with the other gaze with awe and worry over this one family's tethers.
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1 comment:
thanks simon
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