"It was my path and things were happening every day. I never went home and told my parents that people threw bananas at me. I got interviewed recently during Black History Month and my brother, my sister, my mom, were, like, 'Oh, we didn't have a clue, we didn't know.'"
Vilgrain said he and several other Black players of his era suffered silently because they feared being labeled as malcontents, being traded, cut, or dispatched to the minor leagues forever if they spoke up.
"Nobody understood what we (Black players) were going through," he said. "Hockey was my dream. I know there were some guys … they kept defending themselves every time somebody said something. I would have had to do that all the time. My dream was to play in the NHL, so I looked the other way."
Not anymore.
"It's a new generation of young kids out there, and I don't want them to go through even one percent of what I went through," he said.
Photos: Doug MacLean and Paul Bereswill, Hockey Hall of Fame, Candice Ward, University of British Columbia, University of New Hampshire.