Artie Traum's Halifax commemorates the expulsion of Acadians from Canada
Halifax tells how Acadians were driven from Canada in 1755, an early example of ethnic cleansing in colonial-era North America. Beausoleil was an Acadian resistance fighter who waged a guerrilla war against the British near Halifax. He did not prevent thousands of Acadians from being loaded on boats and sent to Virginia, French Guiana and Louisiana. I learned much of this story from Michael Doucet, the irrepressible fiddler and Cajun scholar behind the band Beausoleil. I've been drawn to Cajun culture and history since I worked with Michael Doucet on the CD 'Chez Les Cajuns' several years ago. Perhaps the Acadian exile reminds me of Jewish history and how our ancestors were driven from lands they cherished - over and over - in the past. I believe a good song shouldn't need a long introduction but sometimes a little history expands what songwriters must compress into a handful of short verses. I tried to convey the emotion, despair and excitement of those sad years in the mid-18th Century
Read entire article at Artie Traum on the song he wrote to commemorate the expulsion of Acadians (click here to watch a video)