In The Surrounded Catharine’s death scene presents an unusual power
play between this dying old woman and Father Jerome. Her renunciation of the Christian faith on her deathbed does
not go over well with the priest.
His insistence upon performing Christian rituals is incredibly
disrespectful, but it makes me wonder why he chose to do so against her
wishes. There is the aspect of
wanting her to go to heaven, coming from a place of caring, but Father Jerome’s
anger hints that it comes from a different place. He is very angry.
He takes personal offense to Catherine’s return to Salish religious
culture. I think this feeling is
exacerbated in him because when he arrives, she is already at a place where she
cannot respond to him. She
renounced her faith without him there, and now there’s nothing he can do to
change her, and this upsets him. She
was the great success story, so a failure in her was a slap in the face. She represents the failure of
missionaries, and the futility of their reach to this other culture.
No comments:
Post a Comment