Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Pow Wow Trail Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre
Presents
Pow Wow Trail
2009

June 2009

June 19 - 21
Sakimay First Nations Contest Pow wow ……..Grenfell, SK…………….306 – 697 – 2831

June 19 – 21
Moosomin First Nations Pow wow ………N of North Battleford, Sk……306 – 386 – 2206

June 20
National Aboriginal Day Celebration…Friendship Pk, Saskatoon, SK…306 – 244 - 0174

June 21
Paspiwin 4th Annual Traditional Pow wow…..P.A. National Park………..306 - ­­663 – 4508

June 23 – 25
Sakicawasihk Contest Pow wow………N Battleford Civic Centre………306 – 446 – 3833


July 2009
July 3 – 4
Muskeg Lake Cree Nation Pow wow…Muskeg Lake First Nation, SK….306 – 466 - 7175

July 10 – 12
Kahkewistahaw Pow wow………Kahkewistahaw First Nation, SK……...306 – 696 - 3291

July 17 – 19
Onion Lake Contest Pow wow………Onion Lake First Nation, SK……...306 – 344 – 7225

July 18 – 19
Mistawasis Traditional Pow wow ………Near Leask, SK …………………306 – 466 – 4800

July 24 – 26
Thunderchild Pow wow ……………Thunderchild First Nation, SK……...306 – 845 – 4300

July 24 – 26
Carry the Kettle Pow wow ……….Sintaluta, SK……………………………..306 – 727 – 2135

July 23 – 28
Back to Batoche –Metis Days…………East of Rosthern, SK…………….306 – 343 – 8285

July 31 – August 2
Ocean Man First Nation Pow wow…….Near Stoughton, SK……………..306 – 457 – 2679


July 31 – August 2
Touchwood Agency T.C. Pow wow…Kawakatoose First Nation, SK…..306 – 835 - 2125

August

August 6 – 9
John Arcand’s 12th Annual Fiddle Festival…..W of Saskatoon, SK…….306 – 382 – 0111

August 7 – 9
Standing Buffalo Pow wow ………….Fort Qu Appelle, SK………………..306 – 332 – 4685

August 11 – 13
Cowessess Traditional Pow wow…….Cowessess First Nation………….306 – 696 – 2520

August 21 – 23
George Gordon First Nation Pow wow…..S of Punnichy, SK…………….306 – 835 – 2232








* these dates could change at any time, please call phone numbers provided before you depart for the Pow Wow
John Spyglass

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Birch Bark and First Nations

Birch Trees ( Betula papyrifera) are found throughout the North American Boreal Forest, highly prized by the First Nations people, the uses of the Birch Bark can be traced back to the beginning of time when the Thunderbirds marked the characteristic stripes and enriched exceptional properties. In fact many Indigenous cultures around the world regard the Birch Tree as a sacred plant that was blessed with qualities for the benefit of human kind. There are legends, ceremonies and offerings during the harvesting of the bark, roots , leaves, wood and the fungus that grows on the birch tree.


The use of the bark spanned the lifetime of an individual , the bark served as a Cradleboard cover when the child was born , and when the person passed on it became a wrapping for the deceased.


The Birchbark can be peeled to any thickness , stored for long periods of time, and regenerated for future use, it is light weight , portable, durable and is very strong, this resulted in its extensive use.


The Northern Cree have used the Birchbark for Lodge coverings, containers for food and medicine and other personal items, hunting gear, fishing gear, for tinder, torches and for artwork, beadwork and quillwork.


The bark also served for documentation purposes as maps and to transmit sacred rites, songs and teachings passed down from generation after generation since time immemorial.


Medicinal teas and ointments were brewed from the trees bark, leaves and twigs, the wood was used to make utensils.


Birchbark Canoes are ideal vehicles for people who depended upon hunting, gathering, and fishing for their survival, to travel the vast waterways this vehicle was perfect for it was easily manuevorable and lightweight.
Traditionally the skills and knowledge required for canoe makers would take years of observation and experience, besides knowing the technical skills needed the Canoemaker had an intimate understanding of the Birchbark and other materials gathered from Mother Earth - such as the various wood, resins, and roots . The Traditions required ceremony and thanksgiving , songs and stories about the Birchbark would be taught from one generation to the next.
The Gathering of materials, the Ceremonies, songs and stories required Family support, it was labour-intensive including the preparations for the Gathering all structured around the strong cultural relationships with Kinship and respect for the land. The Birchbark was gathered during the spring and late summe as the bark was more pliable and easily removed.
There are various uses for the Birchbark and its roots, First Nations believe that the Birch Tree provides strength, safety and security; containers, baskets and other artforms made from Birchbark are highly prized because they make the house safe and secure.

Monday, March 16, 2009

The Dream Catcher

In traditional worldview of the Saulteaux people of the North American Plains believe that the night is full of both positive and negative dreams.

The customary tradition is when a Dream Catcher is hung above or near the place where you sleep, it moves freely in the night and catches the dreams as they drift by.

The good dreams, knowing their way, flow and pass through the opening in the center of the Dream Catcher webbing, meanwhile the bad dreams, not knowing the way, are caught in the webbing and are destroyed at the first light of the morning sun.

Although the Saulteaux people are credited for the origins of the Dream Catcher, many other Indigenous cultures have adopted Dream Catcher Legends as part of their Oral History.

Though the intricate designs and Oral legends differ slightly, the underlying meaning and symbolism is universal and is understood across Indigenous cultures and language barriers.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Extraordinary persistance

Saskatoon, Regina and Prince Albert have grown tremendously with huge numbers of First Nations People coming from all over Saskatchewan as well as other provinces and countries. This diversity continues to grow as people migrate to better futures, better housing and better access to education and work, as this may be a positive change for many, there are certainly negative changes and attitudes that come with it.

Let me tell you a story of this one lady from a Northern Reserve , farther north from Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan, from a reserve called the Waterhen Lake Reserve, it is a Cree Community with little contact with the outside world, a place where much of the children learn Cree as their first language. Life is a difficult challenge for the residents on the Waterhen Lake reserve, much like all First Nations Reserves in Saskatchewan, poverty is abundant and jobs are scarce.

I could possibly use the real name of this determined lady, but I will call her Mary, Mary was born and raised on the Waterhen Lake reserve, speaking Cree and learning the traditional ways of her culture through her Kohkum and Moshum. Mary became a hard working young woman who met and married a nice man from the community. The young couple started a family but soon found out that on a reserve the waiting list for a new house could be many, many years, and with no place to live they both decided to move to Saskatoon where a cousin had moved to the year before. Mary's husband soon found a job in the Industrial area of the city with minimum wages and to make a living with this meagre paycheck, essential items had to be cut from the grocery list. As their son was growing up and was starting school, Mary and her husband could not afford the school costs and the extra activities, this was very discouraging.

Mary spoke Cree fluently, as a result she never completed school and quit altogether in Grade Six on the Dayschool in Waterhen Lake First Nation, she never drove a vehicle so she never got her license.

As there son grew up and started school, Mary decided to go back to school, she began with an Adult Upgrading Course starting with Grade 4 - 6 , than she completed grade 7 - 9 , than finally she completed her 10 - 12 , Mary Graduated in June 2003 with her grade 12 diploma.

With her diploma in hand, Mary entered the First Nations University of Canada in the Social Work Program, and in October 2007, Mary recieved her Social Work degree and now works in a Tribal office in Saskatchewan as one of the directors. Mary also learned how to drive and she got her own drivers license.

Mary has had difficult obstacles to overcome and she has had the determination to fight her own poverty, addictions and racism, but she is an example of how a person can achieve goals and dreams despite negative stereotypes.

Update: Mary continues to work in a director's postition, her husband continues to work in the labour force, and their son is now in junior high school. Mary still speaks Cree fluently, at her meetings she will speak in Cree and will translate for those that no longer want to speak Cree and to those that can't understand.

Monday, September 22, 2008

AIM Program - 60's Scoop

Did you know that the Allen Blakeney government appointed people to go onto First Nations reserves to forcebly remove children from their parents, sometimes without the parents knowledge. Just imagine coming home from work and your children are gone!! There is nothing more devastating than finding your children gone, even when you found out where they were, you could not do anything to get them back - if you did chances are you would break the law and chances are you would spend time in jail.

This story among thousands happened all the time to First Nations families, all across the country people still don't know what happened to their children.

" April 1, 1967 was the inaugural date of the program (AIM -Adopt Indian and Metis children) geared to placing Indian and Metis children for adoption. Undertaken as a two-year pilot project to determine the feasability of such placement. AIM was designed to operate in a specific area of the province (the south-east corner), and to provide publicity and follow-up service to communities, groups and interested parties. "-Saskatchewan Department of Welfare, Annual Report 1967 - 1968

I remember one time during the late spring (May 1972)- my cousin was keeping us -she was 17 years old and my youngest brother Roddy was 4 years old , Bert was 6 and I was 8 years old, it was after school and we were instructed by my parents to go to my uncle's house as they had to go into town to sell pickets and get groceries. We decided to take a walk to my Grandma's house just down the road, as we were walking my cousin noticed a bird's nest in the bushes off the road. My cousin decided to climb the tree and told us to wait by the road - she did'nt want us to get our school clothes dirty. As soon as she climbed the tree , out from nowhere a car pulled up beside us. What I noticed was a large picture on the side of the car with fancy royal script and a picture of a crown, when it stopped a man in a tight brown-grey suit stepped out from the passenger side and asked us what our names were and to get into the back seat, the driver never stepped out but he had on glasses and never smiled. My cousin (Dorothy Starchief) came rushing down the tree yelling for us to run - "Ta-pa-sihk Indian Affairs!!!!"("Run away Indian Affairs!!!). The guy in the brown-grey suit took one look at my cousin, got in the car and they drove away , all you could see was the dust in the air. When all this excitement was over it was than that my cousin told us that we could have been picked up by the Indian Affairs and taken away. I always think about this and I often think about the guy in the brown-grey suit, because he was a First Nations man.



Once the children were taken away with just the clothes on their backs, they were taken to the social services, the boys had their hair shaved and the girls had bowl cuts - this was to get rid of lice, their clothes were burned and new ones (usually cast offs) were put on them. Than the Social Services would take a picture of the child and placed an ad in the Star-Phoenix Newspaper (Saskatoon, SK) advertising the child's qualities without mention of the child's history and race. There were whole families that were apprehended and separated, some adopted out of the province and in some cases out of country. (These ads can be found in the Frances Morrison Library Archives -Newspaper microfiche- 1960 - 1985, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)(there were brochures that were distributed all over the world about the new AIM Program)

It is sad to understand what feelings the parents suffered during these times , many parents died without knowing about their children and many children died without ever knowing thier families again.

This type of forceble adoption and apprehension deserves the same legal practices, apology and payment as the Residential School System as both were developed through the policies of the Canadian Government and Indian Affairs Branch, which devastated the First Nations people and continues to this very day. The policy was designed in conjunction to the assimiliation strategies of the Canadian Government to get rid of First Nations people and their treaty status.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Almighty Voice

Almighty Voice was born in 1874

Monday, December 10, 2007

The Morning Star Blanket

Native American Rugs, Blankets, and Quilts
The best-known native textile art in North America is the weaving of Navajo Indian blankets and rugs. These impressive (and expensive) rugs are still made in a style that was traditional in Mexico and the southwest United States long before the arrival of Europeans: kneeling before a vertical wooden-frame loom and using a shuttle to weave colored threads together into large-scale geometric designs. Originally Navajo and other Southwest Indian blankets were made of hand-spun cotton thread, but after the Spanish brought domestic sheep to the region the people primarily switched to wool. Though Navajo rugs are the most famous weavings in North America, they are certainly not the only one.

Finger-weaving has been important throughout the continent since ancient times, and finger-woven blankets, tapestries, and clothing are still made in many tribes. The chilkat blankets of Tlingit people are one of the finest examples of finger-woven Indian blankets. Seminole sashes and patchwork are another important Indian textile art. A more recent tradition is star quilts or blankets, which originated among the Sioux tribes (Lakota, Dakota, and Assiniboine) and spread throughout the Great Plains.

Quilting was one of many Artwork techniques that Native Americans developed from European traditions and adapted into something unique to their culture. Star quilts are made by piecing a mosaic of cloth diamonds into the shape of the traditional eight-pointed morning star design of the Sioux. Before the evolution of star quilts, traditional Plains Indian Robes were made from painted, quilled and beaded Buffalo hide. When the Buffalo herds were exterminated this artform largely died out, but some Plains tribe artists still make Buffalo robes and blankets today from the hides of animals raised in captivity.

Star Quilts, Star Robes, Star Blankets are made with great care and ceremony, these robes are presented to people that have achieved milestones in their life, during birth, childhood, adulthood, and old age, even during the passing into another world - people are given StarBlankets.

The Star is represented in these robes as it is a sign of new life -every morning the Elders would wake everyone in camp to come and greet the Morning Sun - if you are able to see the Morning Sun give thanks to the Creator for the gift of another day.

The First Nations People of Saskatchewan developed their livelihood dependant on the migrating Buffalo Herds, 95% of the Food, Shelter, Clothing, Ceremonies revolved around the Buffalo - with the dissappearance there had to be a great change.