Aul's feeling of alienation and being an outsider Feeling like an outsider or feeling alienated from society can be tough. It often makes you feel disconnected or different from those around you, which is what the character Saul felt from the novel “Indian Horse” by Richard Wagamese. To start off, Saul feels this way because of the discrimination Saul feels while playing hockey. It is the one thing that makes him feel wanted but still gets discriminated against. Another example is the effect and how he is treated in the residential school St. Jeromes. Lastly, Saul is afraid of keeping relationships with people because he has a fear of them ending badly and losing them. All in all, Saul being an outsider and alienated from society is affected by Saul’s discrimination against him in hockey, the effect of how he’s treated in the residential school St. Jermoes, and lastly Saul’s fear of keeping relationships with people. Hockey is an escape for Saul, so he thought, but in reality, Saul can never seem to actually escape from the discrimination he …show more content…
Saul says, “I was a stranger in a strange land, a boy who belonged nowhere, not even in my own skin”. This quote portrays Saul’s profound sense of displacement and feeling like an outsider as he navigates his way through the harsh reality of the residential school system, and searches for his identity, and where he belongs. Saul being an outsider and alienated from society, being in a residential school is also shown while he feels invisible, and is struggling to find a place for himself in the oppressive environment of the residential schools. Saul says “I was a shadow living in the images, a ghost among the living, unseen, and unheard”. This quote vividly portrays, Saul's profound sense of proving the statement of being an outsider, and being alienated from