Overview:

Wind From an Enemy Sky is a the story of the Little Elk people, a fictional Northwestern tribe, trying to adjust and survive as white civilization continues to push into their traditional lifestyle. The story revolves around the tribe’s reaction to the building of a dam on their land. The events unfold around the turn of the century as the U.S. government methods of assimilation were straining traditional Indian life. Although fiction, the setting closely resembles the Flathead Reservation and the issues in the book (including boarding school education, a government push towards agricultural lifestyle for Indians, allotment, and the building of a hydroelectric dam) are many of the same issues the Salish and Kootenai Tribes, as well as other tribes across Montana, were dealing with in this time period.

 

D’Arcy McNickle

D’Arcy McNickle (1904-1977) was born on the Flathead Reservation in Montana. His mother was Métis and his father white, but he was a member of the Salish & Kootenai Tribe. The library at Salish Kootenai College in Pablo is named after McNickle, but he is best known for the American Indian history center that carries his name at the Newberry Library in Chicago and his three novels The Surrounded, Runner in the Sun and Wind from an Enemy Sky. He grew up on the Flathead Reservation and later became a writer, historian, and anthropologist. He was a Bureau of Indian Affairs official during the New Deal and founding member of the National Congress of American Indians. McNickle’s knowledge and experience in both white and Indian worlds helped him become an important figure in Native American cultural & political affairs.

 

Rationale for use of the book on the Flathead Reservation:

Wind from an Enemy Sky provides many opportunities for students to look closely at the history and culture of the Mission Valley while simultaneously working on improving writing and reading comprehension. Since the book deals with many of the historical issues Montana Indian tribes have dealt with, using the text allows students to look closely at their own communities as subjects of study as well as acquire some essential understandings about Montana’s Indians. 

The Flathead Reservation has many sites with histories parallel to those explained in the novel which classes can visit and study, and its community members are a valuable resource that can help students understand the history of the area and how that shapes the present day communities.