Image Source: Los Angeles Times

Mary Annette Pember’s Medicine River is a deeply personal and powerful exploration of the lasting impact of Indian boarding schools on Native American communities. Through a blend of memoir and investigative journalism, she traces her family’s painful history, beginning with her mother’s childhood in a Catholic-run boarding school where abuse, neglect, and cultural erasure were routine.

The book goes beyond one family’s story to shed light on a widespread system designed to assimilate Native children by stripping them of their language, identity, and connection to their heritage. Pember reveals how these institutions left generational scars—trauma that echoes through families, shaping mental health, relationships, and community dynamics today.

She also engages with modern research on inherited trauma and critiques the failure of mainstream systems to adequately support Native healing. Despite the heaviness of its subject, the book also carries hope: through storytelling, truth-telling, and the pursuit of justice, there is a path forward. It’s a call to remember, reckon, and restore what was nearly lost.

Learn more: https://www.yahoo.com/news/medicine-river-reckons-legacy-indian-100033061.html