Blaine Favel photo
Blaine Favel, Law'90, former chief and current CEO, has worked for over 25 years to exonerate Cree Chief P卯htokahanapiwiyin ("Poundmaker") of wrongful treason.

Indigenous Alumnus Helps Right a 133-Year-Old Wrong

They say the wheels of justice sometimes grind slowly. And sometimes those wheels need help to get moving at all.

Blaine Favel, Law鈥90, recently saw the truth of those words when a lobbying effort he has championed for more than 25 years finally persuaded the federal government to exonerate Cree Chief P卯htokahanapiwiyin (鈥淧oundmaker鈥) from a wrongful 1885 treason conviction.

鈥淧oundmaker was a good man and a good chief who took care of his people. He was unfairly convicted,鈥 says Favel. 鈥淸The decision] to set history right is the best news I鈥檝e heard in a long time.鈥

Poundmaker鈥檚 story is one Favel knows well. The CEO of Kanata Earth Management (a Cut Knife, Saskatchewan-based, Indigenous-owned producer of organically grown cannabis), is himself a former chief of the Poundmaker First Nation, a former grand-chief of the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations, and Chancellor Emeritus of the University of Saskatchewan

鈥淚 became aware of Poundmaker鈥檚 story when I was growing up, and during my own time as chief, I started working with other members of the Poundmaker First Nation to clear his name.鈥

Alumni family at Homecoming

In May 1885 in the midst of the Northwest Rebellion, the chief went to Fort Battleford in an unsuccessful effort to convince a government 鈥淚ndian agent鈥 to provide treaty payments to starving members of the Poundmaker First Nation. However, when the chief and his still-hungry men returned to their reserve, they were pursued by government soldiers intent on exacting revenge for some looting the Cree were wrongly alleged to have committed. On the morning of May 2, the troops launched a sneak attack.

Eight Canadian troops died in the Battle of Cut Knife Hill, and their mates retreated in disarray, but Poundmaker ordered his fighters not to give chase. 鈥淭hey could have wiped out those soldiers the same way Custer was wiped out at Little Bighorn in 1876, but the chief said no,鈥 Favel says. 鈥淧oundmaker never wanted war. He was a peacemaker.鈥  

Poundmaker was convicted of treason and went to prison for three years. However, when he contracted tuberculosis while behind bars, he was released after a year. He died four months later. Members of the Poundmaker First Nation never forgot or forgave that injustice.

When the Trudeau government prioritized reconciliation with Canada鈥檚 Indigenous people, Favel and other members of the Poundmaker First Nation doubled down in their efforts to win exoneration for the chief. An online petition drew more than 4,500 signatures, and Favel and fellow First Nations leaders lobbied politicians. Their efforts paid off earlier this year when at long last Poundmaker was exonerated. 

Favel regards the move as a vital first step toward a comprehensive reparations agreement between Ottawa and the Poundmaker First Nation. He hopes a formal apology also will be part of any final agreement. 鈥淭he government鈥檚 decision should be viewed as an act of literal reconciliation and nation-building,鈥 Favel says. 鈥淭his is our common history, and so we should embrace Chief Poundmaker as a great Canadian.鈥

This story originally appeared in the Queen's Gazette.

Learn more about P卯htokahanapiwiyin's story and the exoneration in this .