Saskatchewan·First Person

I've had 4 surnames; now I feel I finally have one that matches my identity

I have had four different surnames over the course of my lifetime but only began using what I consider to be my proper name, Osawa Mikisew Iskwew, recently.

Carol Rose GoldenEagle was recently bestowed the name Osawa Mikisew Iskwew in ceremony

Carol GoldenEagle had four different surnames over the course of her lifetime but only recently began using what she considers her proper name. (Matt Howard/CBC Sask)

This piece was originally published on March 12, 2019.

Osawa Mikisew Iskwew. That's my name.  Translated from the Cree language, it means Golden Eagle Woman and carries with it a deep spiritual significance, a reverence for my Indigenous heritage and a connection to my ancestors.

It's a name that I have been carrying since the beginning of time — at least that is what I was told — but that hasn't always been true on paper.

I have had four different surnames over the course of my lifetime but only began using what I consider to be my proper name, Osawa Mikisew Iskwew, recently.

I was born Carol Morin. My guess is that hundreds of years ago there were no Indigenous Morins. It's more likely we had a traditional Indigenous name but some Indian Agent or priest couldn't pronounce it, so they made my family take an Anglicized name.

I became Adams when I was adopted.

Then I was Daniels — the name of my ex-husband — which I am happy to leave behind.

Carol Rose GoldenEagle and her son. GoldenEagle was taken away from her mother as part of the Sixties Scoop. (Submitted by Carol Rose GoldenEagle)

To understand the trajectory of my names is to understand attempts to assimilate Indigenous people in Canada.

I am one of those people who was stolen from my own culture, the moment that I was born in 1963, in what's become known as the Sixties Scoop.

I was taken from my mother the very moment I was born. I have no way of knowing, but I have always hoped that she was able to hold me for just a few moments before never seeing me again.

She is the one who named me Carol, a name I carry with pride. That name is the only thing she gave me that I was allowed to keep.

Sadly, I never got to see her again. By the time the government opened adoption records in the 1990s and I was able to reconnect with my birth family, my biological mother had passed away.

But there is something to be said about genetic memory.  I think she walks beside me, often, now that she is in the spirit world.  

And I am pretty sure she would be happy that I am embracing the name of Golden Eagle. It was given to me in a ceremony.  An elder prayed that I learn this name.

So now I am finally where I always should have been, carrying the name of Osawa Mikisew Iskwew. For the first time in my life, my surname matches my identity.

I am a proud Cree/Dene woman and I am taking back that sacred part of me.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Carol Rose GoldenEagle

Freelance contributor

Carol Rose GoldenEagle was appointed Saskatchewan’s Poet Laureate in 2021. She was named as a member of the Saskatchewan Order of Merit in 2022. She is the author of the award-winning Bearskin Diary, which was chosen as the national Aboriginal Literature Title for 2017. Its French-language translation won a Saskatchewan Book Award in 2019. Her latest novel, The Narrows of Fear, was the chosen winner for a 2021 Saskatchewan Book Award. Other titles including Hiraeth, Essential Ingredients, Bone Black and Stations of the Crossed have each been shortlisted for the Saskatchewan Book Awards. Another collection of poetry, Singing to the Moon — Indigenous Poetry for Children, will be released by Medicine Wheel Publishing in 2023. Carol is Cree and Dene with roots in northern Saskatchewan.