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TORONTO The first treaty Indigenous player in the NHL, Fred Sasakamoose, will tell his story in his own words in a posthumous memoir. The book “Call Me Indian: From the Trauma of Residential School to Becoming the NHL’s first Treaty Indigenous Player,” is scheduled to be released on Tuesday. It details Sasakamoose s brief time in the league, as well as his years spent off the ice, which were dedicated to helping his community and advocating for Indigenous peoples. “It’s his last memoir; it’s his last memory of himself and how he viewed the world and how his experiences changed his life and made him who he was towards the end of his life,” his son, Neil Sasakamoose, said Monday on CTV s Your Morning. ....
SASKATOON Plans are underway to memorialize a Saskatchewan hockey legend who lost his life to COVID-19. A memorial statue of Fred Sasakamoose will be joining Gordie Howe on the steps leading up to SaskTel Centre in Saskatoon. His son Neil Sasakamoose said he’s eager to celebrate the legacy of his father. “My dad was such a large image, I didn’t know the impacts he had on people,” Neil said. “When he passed it was like all of North America engaged and they wanted to do something.” Sasakamoose died at Victoria Hospital in Prince Albert on Nov. 24 after being hospitalized with COVID-19. He was 86 years old. ....
SASKATOON Plans are underway to memorialize a Saskatchewan hockey legend who lost his life to COVID-19. A memorial statue of Fred Sasakamoose could be joining Gordie Howe on the steps leading up to SaskTel Centre in Saskatoon. His son Neil Sasakamoose said he’s eager to celebrate the legacy of his father. “My dad was such a large image, I didn’t know the impacts he had on people,” Neil said. “When he passed it was like all of North America engaged and they wanted to do something.” Sasakamoose died at Victoria Hospital in Prince Albert on Nov. 24 after being hospitalized with COVID-19. He was 86 years old. ....