The Huron carol
(2014)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Groundwood Books Ltd, 2014
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781554984008 (electronic bk.) MWT11652988, 1554984009 (electronic bk.) 11652988
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Renowned children's book illustrator Ian Wallace brings his masterful ability to paint landscape and his cultural sensitivity to The Huron Carol, a beautiful and unusual song with a rich history. In the early 1600s, Father Jean de Břbeuf came to Canada from his native France as a Jesuit missionary. He settled among the Huron, or Ouendat, people in what is now Midland, Ontario. Despite his missionary zeal, Břbeuf was sensitive to the people with whom he lived. He learned their language and he wrote, in Huron, the original version of this famous Christmas carol. He and his fellow priests, called Black Robes, and many of their Huron parishioners were killed in an Iroquois raid in 1649. But Břbeuf's carol continued to be sung by successive generations of Hurons. Then in 1926, Toronto writer Jesse Edgar Middleton, inspired by Břbeuf, wrote his own version of the carol in English. His are the familiar words we sing today, describing the Huron landscape, flora and fauna in telling the Christmas story. Ian Wallace's luminous illustrations, set against the dramatic backdrop of Georgian Bay, make this a stunning Christmas gift book. Multilingual versions of the text, the music, and a full description of how this carol has come down to us today are included

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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