Jacob Roper, a member of the Esketemc people (formerly known as the Alkali Lake Band), saved the life of Lorne Dufour in 1975, when Dufour was an elementary schoolteacher at Alkali Lake. Dufour's new memoir Jacob's Prayer: Loss and Resilience at Alkali Lake (Caitlin $18.95) recalls Jacob's inspirational rescue as well as the tragedy that took the lives of two prominent local men on the same unforgettable night. In 1985, Lorne Dufour played an alcoholic priest in the film called The Honor of All that re-enacts the story of the Alkali Lake Reserve's battle with the severe spread of alcoholism. Lorne Dufour is now a handlogger and poet who lives off the grid in McLeese Lake, B.C., with his wife Diana. Jacob Roper still lives at Alkali Lake.

The saga of alkali lake is a classic B.C. story. For decades the gigantic Alkali Lake Ranch in the Cariboo was separated from the Secwepemc village of Esket (Alkali Lake) by a narrow, gravel road. On one side of Dog Creek Road was poverty; on the other was opulence.
The famous ranch owned by the Riedemann family fifty miles south of Williams Lake, was founded in 1861 by German-born Herman Otto Bowe. It long provided local employment, but Dog Creek Road marked the boundary for two solitudes, Cariboo-style.

With the advent of social assistance in 1956, alcohol abuse spread like a plague within Esket. By 1970, according to elder Andy Chelsea, "It was so bad people used to call it Alcohol Lake.";
Then Andy Chelsea's seven-year-old daughter Ivy changed everything in 1972 when she told her mother Phyllis she was refusing to come home if her mother kept drinking. Phyllis Chelsea was the first person in the community to swear off booze. Her husband Andy followed suit three weeks later. In the fall of 1972, Andy Chelsea, sober, was elected chief.

Gradually, more adults in Esket rejected alcohol. The elementary school was re-opened. By the time Lorne Dufour arrived in 1974 to teach the Grade four and five classes, about 40 per cent of the adults had kicked the alcohol habit and the village was regaining its future, its self-esteem.

Then came a terrible boating accident... In 1975, on a blustery Hallowe'en night, school principal John Rathjen and rancher Martin von Riedemann lost their lives-and Lorne Dufour's life was saved thanks to the quick actions of Jacob Roper.

Jacob Roper was no stranger to tragedy. As described by Cariboo reporter Sage Birchwater, Jacob's nineteen-year-old daughter, Rose Marie, was found dead beside a gravel road adjacent to a garbage dump on April 8, 1967.
"Rose Marie died on the way to a dance at Lac La Hache, forty-five minutes south of Williams Lake. Her naked body was found the next morning, face down in the snow on a gravel road beside the highway. Her neck was broken and her clothes were heaped in a pile nearby. The coroner declared she had likely died of hypothermia. Initially, three young white men were charged with manslaughter for the death of Rose Marie, then the charges were raised to non-capital murder. On September 11, 1967, a jury of eight men and four women in Quesnel decided that two of the young men were only guilty of common assault, and they were fined two hundred dollars. Charges against the third man were dropped. Jacob Roper and the entire First Nations community were aghast. So were a growing number of whites, who felt that the justice system had failed by not placing sufficient value on the life of an aboriginal woman. A week after the trial, Jacob and a group of First Nations chiefs met with attorney general Robert Bonner, claiming that the verdict was an extreme miscarriage of justice. However, the court decision prevailed.";

In recording how Roper saved his life 34 years ago, Dufour remembers his two companions who died.

Martin von Riedemann was a respected thirty-nine-year-old cattleman and a founding director of the Cariboo Regional District. He took control of the ranch operation in 1963 after his father, an Austrian, had purchased it in 1939.

Largely for the benefit of his neighbours, Riedemann had bought seven hundred dollars worth of fireworks which he planned to set off on Hallowe'en night from his small boat anchored in the middle of Alkali Lake. Everything went according to plan, until a strong gale-force wind blew up the valley from the Fraser River.
John Rathjen, at twenty-nine, was the much-loved principal of the three-classroom elementary school in Esket village. Rathjen had accepted the challenge of reopening the Esket Elementary School, which had been closed for eight years. Lorne Dufour was one of three teachers hired to work in the school with Rathjen to develop individual learning programs for each student. Lots of the students in grades four and five had never been taught to read or write.

In the foreword, retired Cariboo Sentinel reporter Sage Birchwater has recorded how Jacob Roper instinctively pulled Lorne Dufour's nearly lifeless body from the waters of Alkali Lake to his pickup truck, and drove him to the teacherage next to the school in Esket village:

Jacob knew what to do to treat severe hypothermia. He stripped off Lorne's clothes and put him into a bathtub of warm water. "He kept pouring bucket after bucket of warm water down my backbone until I revived,"; Lorne recalls.

Jacob says he learned how to treat hypothermia from his grandfather and "all the old Indians. Water draws out the cold,"; he explains.

Jacob got practical experience treating hypothermia when he worked at St. Joseph's Mission. "At the Mission, the boys would go skating when the temperature was way below zero. They only had thin socks to wear. Sometimes they'd get really cold. We'd take off their skates and put their feet in warm water. Blood-heat temperature. Too hot is no good.";

Jacob says he could have saved Martin's life too, but he never had the chance. Martin was still alive when he was rescued from the cold water of the lake and whisked up to the ranch house by his family. Still wearing his wet clothes, he was wrapped in a blanket and placed in front of a roaring fireplace, and the doctor was called from Williams Lake.

Jacob says a lot of people make that mistake. "The heat from the fire drives the cold into the body. Water can draw it out, and you wouldn't get sick.";
Riedemann died that night from hypothermia as the cold penetrated his body and stopped his heart.

After his warm water treatment in the bathtub, Lorne recovered from his ordeal with no ill effects. "Lorne got up and went back down to the lake to look for his partner,"; Jacob says. "But there was nothing he could do.";

Sadly, John Rathjen never made it to shore. His body was recovered the next day from the lake, close to the spot where Lorne had seen him disappear beneath the waves.

"In a way I am Jacob's prayer,"; Lorne Dufour says. "I survived, bought a team of horses and had a family.

"By his actions, he got beyond forgiveness. He got in touch with creation. He did it automatically. He did what had to be done. He knew when he was called to do something he could do it.

"In many ways, Jacob was his own prayer."; 978-1-894759-35-9

[BCBW 2009]