Monday, June 18, 2007

Political Organizations Today

The Assembly of First Nations
  • represents First Nations people who are registered under the Indian Act ("status Indians"), including those who have rights by treaty ("treaty Indians")

The Congress of Aboriginal People

  • represents First Nations people who live off reserves or are Metis or belong to certain communities with strong Aboriginal ties

The Inuit Tapirisat of Canada

  • represents Inuit people

The Metis National Council

  • represents the Metis in Canada

The Metis

The Metis were descendants of Aboriginal peoples and Europeans who had intermarried. Fur traders relied on the Metis to supply them with pemmican. Metis men hunted buffalo, farmed, trapped and traded furs. By the mid-1800's, 10,000 Metis lived in the area near what is now Winnipeg.

In 1869, the Canadian government made plans to offer land to English settlers, but did not consult the Metis people who's land it was. Prime Minister John A. Macdonald sent surveyors to divide land into plots but they were sent packing by Metis leader Louis Riel. Macdonald appointed a governor to manage Fort Garry, the heart of the Red River settlement. A rebellion broke out and Riel and his men took over. They formed their own government, but because they executed a prisoner named Thomas Scott, the Canadian government saw them as hostile people who needed to be captured.

In 1885 Riel led his people in a second rebellion with another leader named Gabriel Dumont. Battles took place at Duck Lake and Batoche, but the Metis were defeated. Two Cree chiefs, Poundmaker and Big Bear, tried to stop their warriors from joining the rebellion. Despite that fact, they were tried and found guilty of felony and treason and sentenced to a term in jail. Louis Riel was convicted of treason and in 1885 he was hanged.

Today there are many Metis all over Canada and some live on settlements. For more information go to:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%A9tis_people_(Canada)

Algonquians of the Eastern Woodlands



The eastern woodlands stretched from Lake Superior and Lake Huron, west almost to the plains, east to the Atlantic Ocean, north into what is now northern Ontario and south below today's border with the United States. It was a diverse land with diverse people. The people were known as:

  • Abenaki
  • Anissinapek (Algonkin)
  • Beothuk
  • Maliseet (Malecite)
  • Mi'kmaq (Micmac)
  • Odawa (Ottawa)
  • Ojibwe (Ojibway)

Algonquians planted corn, beans and squash, but mostly survived by hunting, trapping, fishing and gathering plants from the wild, such as wild rice. They lived in domed or conical wigwams (this word comes from the Algonquian word "wigwaus," which means "birchbark." Birch trees grew in most parts of the lands of the Algonquian-speaking peoples. The trees were made into canoes, homes and containers.

Creation story: http://www.sgsd.k12.wi.us/homework/kanne/webpage%20stuff/American%20Literature/PreColonial%20Lit/Algonquian%20Creation%20Story.htm

Iroquoians of the Eastern Woodlands




Southeastern Ontario was, and still is, the home of the peoples who speak different dialects of the Iroquoian language. They lived in settled villages, and they hunted, gathered and cultivated crops. They were skilled farmers, and they developed a complex government known as The League of the Six Nations.

The peoples lived in longhouses, with sometimes five to six families in each. A large village might have up to 100 longhouses. Around the outside of the village there was a wall made of pointed posts called palisades. This was to protect the village from attacks.

The crops that were most common were maize (corn), beans and squash. Lacrosse was the game played by the people and was considered to be a gift from the creator. Lacrosse is now Canada's national sport.

Iroquoians of the Eastern Woodlands include:
  • Erie
  • Wendat (Huron)
  • Neutral
  • Tionontati (Petun)
  • Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), which included the Cayuga, Ganiengehaga (Mohawk), Oneida, Onondaga and Seneca

Creation story: www.cs.williams.edu/~lindsey/myths/myths_12.html

Peoples of the Subarctic



The Canadian Subarctic stretches across the country from the Labrador coast westward and into northern Canada. The vast area includes areas of mountains, forests, lakes, rivers, muskeg, and great stretches of barren lands were no trees grow. Winters are harsh and food is often scarce. Summers are swarmed with black flies and mosquitoes.

Peoples of the Subarctic include:

Western Subarctic Eastern Subarctic

  • Tsay Keh Dene (Sekani) Subarctic Cree
  • Mountain Attikamek
  • Kaska Dena (Kaska) Innu
  • Tutchone Montagnais
  • Tr'ondek Hwech'in (Han) Naskapi
  • Gwich'in (Kutchin)
  • Hare
  • Dogrib
  • Yellowknife
  • Acha-otinne (Slavey)
  • Dunne-za (Beaver)
  • Tahltan
  • Dakelh-ne (Carrier)
  • Natot'en (Western Carrier)
  • Wetsuwet'en
  • Tagish
  • Chipewyan
  • Ts'ilh'aot'in (Chilcotin)
  • Inland Tlingit

The Subarctic peoples lived in small groups of related families and travelled extensively and in all seasons in search for food and other resources. Homes varied in style, but all had to be easily transported and assembled. They lived in conical tents and domed tents made of caribou hides or spruce boughs. They ate caribou, musk-oxen, moose, hares, beavers, muskrats and porcupines, and a lot of fish. They also gathered berries of various kinds.

Creation story: www.arcticrefugeaction.org/about_refuge/2004Gwichinbrochure.pdf

Peoples of the Arctic



The Arctic is mostly tundra-treeless land with only a small top layer of soil that thaws enough for plants to grow. In the summer, daylight lasts for 24 hours and in the winter, the sun does not rise over the horizon. The Inuit and the Inuvialuit peoples live here in family groups that value cooperation and sharing.

The igloo was used through most of the Canadian Arctic in winter. Blocks of snow were carved out, if the snow was soft enough, and made into igloos. A large family size igloo would last about six weeks. A vent hole called a "qihaq" let heat and smoke escape.

Most Inuit groups hunted sea mammals - seals, walrus and whales. These provided oil, thread, skin clothing, boots, storage containers, tools and coverings for boats and tents. All parts of the animals were used. Land animals were important too - caribou, musk oxen, hares and ground squirrels.

An inukshuk is an arrangement of rocks that served as a landmark, a memorial or as an aid in hunting caribou. They were two or three rocks piled one on top of another, but today they look like a human figure.

Creation story: www.painsley.org.uk/RE/signposts/y8/1-1creationandenvironment/c- inuit.htm

Peoples of the Plains



Stretching across Alberta, Saskatchewan and southwestern Manitoba is a windswept prairie. Three major rivers flow through the plains - the Bow, Assiniboine and the South Saskatchewan. The Plains peoples made this area their home, travelling in their quest for food, searching for the great herds of buffalo that they depended on for life.

Peoples of the Plains include:

  • Assiniboine (Nakoda)
  • Siksika (Blackfoot)
  • Kainai (Blood)
  • A'aninin (Gros Ventre)
  • Pikuni (Peigan)
  • Nehiyauak (Plains Cree)
  • T'suu T'ina (Sarcee)

The peoples travelled in small groups except when they came together for communal hunts or ceremonies. Tipis were the ideal homes-they were easy to transport from place to place in the spring and summer seasons. Women made, owned and set up the tipis. They were anchored to the ground with sturdy wooden pegs and rocks to keep them from blowing over in strong praire winds.

The Plains peoples depended on the buffalo, or "bison," to provide them with food, clothing, housing, weapons, fuel, transportation, containers and tools. The people used every part of the great animal, and at one time, more than fifty million buffalo roamed the Plains of North America. When the buffalo disappeared (slaughtered by the white man) so did the Plains peoples way of life.

Creation story: http://library.thinkquest.org/03oct/00875/text/BlackfootC.htm