Difference between revisions of "Ojibwa" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(Checked spelling and applied Ready tag.)
 
(107 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Ready}}{{Claimed}}{{Started}}
+
{{Images OK}}{{Approved}}{{Copyedited}}
 +
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 +
[[Category:Anthropology]]
 +
[[Category:Ethnic group]]
  
{{ethnic group|
+
{{Infobox Ethnic group|
 
|group=Ojibwa
 
|group=Ojibwa
|image=[[Image:One-Called-From-A-Distance Chippewa.jpg|200px]]<br/>"One Called From A Distance" (Midwewinind) of the [[White Earth Band of Chippewa|White Earth Band]], 1894.
+
|image=[[Image:Anishinabe.svg|200px]]<br/> Crest of the Ojibwa people
 
|poptime=175,000
 
|poptime=175,000
 
|popplace=[[United States]], [[Canada]]
 
|popplace=[[United States]], [[Canada]]
Line 10: Line 13:
 
|related=[[Ottawa (tribe)|Ottawa]], [[Potawatomi]] and other [[Algonquian]] peoples  
 
|related=[[Ottawa (tribe)|Ottawa]], [[Potawatomi]] and other [[Algonquian]] peoples  
 
}}
 
}}
 +
The '''Ojibwa''' or '''Chippewa''' (also '''Ojibwe''', '''Ojibway''', '''Chippeway''') is one of the largest groups of [[Native Americans in the United States|Native Americans]]-[[First Nations]] in [[North America]]. They are divided between the [[United States]] and [[Canada]]. Because they were formerly located mainly around [[Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario|Sault Ste. Marie]], at the outlet of [[Lake Superior]], the [[French people|French]] referred to them as '''Saulteurs'''. Ojibwa who subsequently moved to the [[prairie provinces]] of Canada have retained the name [[Saulteaux]]. Ojibwa who were originally located about the [[Mississagi River]] and made their way to [[southern Ontario]] are known as the [[Mississaugas]].
 +
 +
They were fearless [[warrior]]s and, with the use of [[gun]] technology from the British, they were able to defeat and push back the [[Sioux]] and [[Fox tribe]]s to become the unchallenged inhabitants of vast areas of the northern plains around the [[Great Lakes]].
  
{{redirect|Chippewa}}
+
They are known for their [[Birch|birch bark]] [[canoe]]s, sacred [[birch bark scrolls]], the use of [[cowrie]] shells, [[wild rice]], [[copper]] points. Their [[Midewiwin]] Society is well respected as the keeper of detailed and complex [[scroll]]s of events, history, songs, maps, memories, stories, geometry, and mathematics. The Ojibwa Nation was the first to set the agenda for signing more detailed treaties with Canada's leaders before many settlers were allowed too far west. They also signed numerous treaties with the United States, seeking to keep at least portions of their ancestral lands to be designated as their [[Indian reservation|reservation]]s and avoiding the tragic relocations of many other tribes.
The '''Ojibwa''', '''[[Anishinaabe]]''' or '''Chippewa''' (also '''Ojibwe''', '''Ojibway''', '''Chippeway''', '''Aanishanabe''', or '''Anishinabek''')  is the largest group of [[Native Americans in the United States|Native Americans]]/[[First Nations]] north of [[Mexico]], including [[Métis people (Canada)|Métis]]. They are the third largest in the [[USA]], surpassed only by [[Cherokee]] and [[Navajo Nation|Navajo]]. They are equally divided between the United States and [[Canada]]. Because they formerly were located mainly around [[Sault Ste. Marie]], at the outlet of [[Lake Superior]], the [[French people|French]] referred to them as '''Saulteurs'''; Ojibwa who subsequently moved to the [[Prairie provinces]] of Canada have retained the name [[Saulteaux]].  The major component group of the Anishinaabe, in the US they number over 100,000 living in an area stretching across the north from [[Michigan]] to [[Montana]]. Another 76,000, in 125 bands, live in Canada, stretching from western [[Québec]] to eastern [[British Columbia]]. They are known for their [[Paper Birch|Birch bark]] [[canoe]]s, sacred [[birch bark scrolls]], the use of [[cowrie]] shells, [[wild rice]], copper points, and for the fact that they were the only Native Americans to come close to defeating the [[Dakota]] band of the Sioux. The Ojibwe Nation was the first to set the agenda for signing more detailed treaties with Canada's leaders before many settlers were allowed too far west.  The [[Midewiwin]] Society was well respected as the keeper of detailed and complex scrolls of events, history, songs, maps, memories, stories, geometry, and mathematics.<ref>[http://emuseum.mnsu.edu/history/mncultures/anishinabe.html Native Peoples of Minnesota]. Minnesota State University. Retrieved November 7, 2007.</ref>
+
{{toc}}
 +
Today, as a major component group of the [[Anishinaabe]] peoples—which includes the [[Algonquin]], [[Nipissing First Nation|Nipissing]], [[Oji-Cree]], [[Odawa people|Odawa]] and the [[Potawatomi]]—the Ojibwa peoples number over 100,000 in the U.S., living in an area stretching across the north from [[Michigan]] to [[Montana]]. Another 76,000, in 125 bands, live in Canada, stretching from western [[Québec]] to eastern [[British Columbia]]. Despite facing [[poverty]] and high levels of [[unemployment]], many contemporary Ojibwa continue to follow traditional ways, both practical and spiritual. They are active in resource management, seeking ways to live in harmony with their environment.  
  
==Name==
+
==Names==
 +
The name ''Ojibwe'' (plural: ''Ojibweg'') is commonly anglicized as "Ojibwa." The name "Chippewa" is an anglicized corruption of "Ojibwa." Although many variations exist in literature, "Chippewa" is more common in the [[United States]] and "Ojibwa" predominates in [[Canada]], but both terms do exist in both countries. The exact meaning of the name "Ojibwe" is not known; the most common explanations on the name derivations are:
 +
* from ''ojiibwabwe'' (/o/ + /jiibw/ + /abwe/), meaning "those who cook\roast until it puckers," referring to their fire-curing of [[moccasin (footwear)|moccasin]] seams to make them water-proof (Roy 2008), though some sources instead say this was a method of [[torture]] which the Ojibwa implemented upon their enemies (Warren 1984).
 +
* from ''ozhibii'iwe'' (/o/ + /zhibii'/ + /iwe/), meaning "those who keep records [of a Vision]," referring to their form of pictorial writing, and [[pictograph]]s used in [[Midewiwin]] rites (Erdrich 2003).
 +
* from ''ojiibwe'' (/o/ + /jiib/ + /we/), meaning "those who speak-stiffly"\"those who stammer," referring to how the Ojibwa sounded to the [[Cree]] (Johnston 2007).
 +
The ''Saulteaux'' (also ''Salteaux'' {{pronounced|ˈsoʊtoʊ}}) are a [[First Nation]] in [[Ontario]], [[Manitoba]], [[Saskatchewan]], [[Alberta]], and [[British Columbia]], [[Canada]], and a branch of the Ojibwa. ''Saulteaux'' is a [[French language]] term meaning "people of the rapids," referring to their former location about [[Sault Ste. Marie]].
  
The [[autonym]] for this group of [[Anishinaabe]]g is "''Ojibwe''" (plural: ''Ojibweg'').  This name is commonly anglicized as "Ojibwa." The name "Chippewa" is an anglicized corruption of "Ojibwa."  Although [[Ojibwa/Names|many variations]] exist in literature, "Chippewa" is more common in the USA and "Ojibwa" predominates in Canada, but both terms do exist in both countries.  The exact meaning of the name "Ojibwe" is not known; however, two most common explanations are 1) it is derived from "Ojiibwabwe" meaning "[Those who] cook until it puckers" referring to their fire-curing of [[moccasin (footwear)|moccasin]] seams to make them water-proof<ref>Daffern, Thomas Clough. 1999. [http://www.humiliationstudies.org/documents/DaffernMultilingualDictionary.pdf Appendix 5: Multilingual Dictionary for Multifaith and Multicultural Mediation and Education]. Muses Journal. Retrieved November 7, 2007.</ref> and 2) the most likely, it is derived from the word "Ozhibii'iweg" meaning "[Those who] keep Records of a Vision" referring to their form of pictorial writing, and [[pictograph]]s used in [[Midewiwin]] rites<ref>Erdrich, L. 2003. ''Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country''. Washington, DC: National Geographic. ISBN 0792257197.</ref>.  Across many Ojibwa communities across Canada and the US, the more generalized name of "''Anishinaabe(-g)''" is becoming more common.
+
The Ojibwa/Chippewa are part of the ''[[Anishinaabe]]'' peoples, together with the [[Odawa people|Odawa]] and [[Algonkin]] peoples. ''Anishnaabeg'' (plural form) means "First- or Original-Peoples" or it may refer to "the good humans," or good people, that are on the right road/path given to them by the Creator or ''gitchi-manitou'' (Anishinaabeg term for [[God]]). In many Ojibwa communities throughout Canada and the U. S., the more generalized name ''Anishinaabe(-g)'' is becoming more commonly used as a self-description.
  
 
==Language==
 
==Language==
 
{{main|Anishinaabe language}}
 
{{main|Anishinaabe language}}
  
Many still speak the [[Anishinaabe language|Ojibwe language]] known as ''Anishinaabemowin'' or ''Ojibwemowin''. The language belongs to the [[Algonquian languages|Algonquian]] linguistic group, and is descended from [[Proto-Algonquian language|Proto-Algonquian]]. Among its sister languages are Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Cree, Fox, Menominee, Potawatomi, and Shawnee. ''Anishinaabemowin'' is frequently referred to as a "Central Algonquian" language; however, Central Algonquian is an areal grouping rather than a genetic one. ''Ojibwemowin'' is the fourth most spoken Native language in [[North America]] (after [[Navajo language|Navajo]], [[Cree language|Cree]], and [[Inuktitut language|Inuktitut]]). Many decades of fur trading with the French established the language as one of the key trade languages of the [[Great Lakes]] and the northern [[Great Plains]]. The Ojibwe presence was made highly visible among non-Native Americans and around the world by the popularity of [[Longfellow]]'s 1855 epic poem, [[The Song of Hiawatha]]. Many [[toponym]]s with an origin in Ojibwa words are found in this epic.
+
The Ojibwe language is known as ''Anishinaabemowin'' or ''Ojibwemowin,'' and is still widely spoken. It belongs to the [[Algonquian languages|Algonquian]] linguistic group, and is descended from [[Proto-Algonquian language|Proto-Algonquian]]. Its sister languages include [[Blackfoot]], [[Cheyenne]], [[Cree]], [[Fox (tribe)|Fox]], [[Menominee]], [[Potawatomi]], and [[Shawnee]]. ''Anishinaabemowin'' is frequently referred to as a "Central Algonquian" language; however, Central Algonquian is an areal grouping rather than a genetic one. ''Ojibwemowin'' is the fourth most spoken Native language in [[North America]] (after [[Navajo language|Navajo]], [[Cree language|Cree]], and [[Inuktitut language|Inuktitut]]). Many decades of [[Fur trade|fur trading]] with the French established the language as one of the key trade languages of the [[Great Lakes]] and the northern [[Great Plains]].  
 +
 
 +
The Ojibwa presence was made highly visible among non-Native Americans and around the world by the popularity of the [[epic poem]] ''[[The Song of Hiawatha]],'' written by [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]] in 1855. The epic contains many [[toponym]]s that originate from Ojibwa words.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
===Pre-contact with Europeans===
+
===Pre-contact===
According to their tradition, and from recordings in [[birch bark scrolls]], many more of them came from the eastern areas of North America, or [[Turtle Island]], and from along the east coast.  They traded widely across the Continent for thousands of years, and knew of the canoe routes west, and a land route to the west coast.  According to the oral history, seven great ''miigis'' (radiant/iridescent) beings appeared to the peoples in the [[Abenaki|''Waabanakiing'']] (Land of the Dawn, i.e. Eastern Land) to teach the peoples of the [[midewiwin|''mide'' way]] of life.  However, the one of the seven great ''miigis'' beings was too spiritually powerful and killed the peoples in the ''Waabanakiing'' whenever the people were in its presence.  The six great ''miigis'' beings remained to teach while the one returned into the ocean.  The six great ''miigis'' beings then established ''doodem'' (clans) for the peoples in the east.  Of these ''doodem'', the five original [[Anishinaabe]] ''doodem'' were the ''Wawaazisii'' ([[Brown bullhead|Bullhead]]), ''Baswenaazhi'' (Echo-maker, i.e., [[Crane (bird)|Crane]]), ''Aan'aawenh'' ([[Pintail]] Duck), ''Nooke'' (Tender, i.e., [[Bear]]) and ''Moozoonsii'' (Little [[Moose]]), then these six ''miigis'' beings returned into the ocean as well. If the seventh ''miigis'' being stayed, it would have established the [[Thunderbird (mythology)|Thunderbird]] ''doodem''.  At a later time, one of these ''miigis'' beings appeared in a vision to relate a prophecy.  The prophecy stated that if more of the Anishinaabeg did not move further west, they would not be able to keep their traditional ways alive because of the many new settlements and European immigrants that would arrive soon in the east. Their migration path would be symbolized by a series of smaller Turtle Islands, which was confirmed with ''miigis'' shells (i.e., [[cowry]] shells).  After receiving assurance from the their "Allied Brothers" (i.e., [[Mi'kmaq]]) and "Father" (i.e., [[Abnaki]]) of their safety in having many more of the Anishinaabeg move inland, they advanced along the [[St. Lawrence River]] to the [[Ottawa River]] to [[Lake Nipissing]], and then to the [[Great Lakes]].  First of these smaller Turtle Islands was ''Mooniyaa'', which ''Mooniyaang'' ([[Montreal, Quebec]]) now stands.  The "second stopping place" was in the vicinity of the ''Wayaanag-gakaabikaa'' (Concave Waterfalls, i.e. [[Niagara Falls]]).  At their "third stopping place" near the present-day city of [[Detroit, Michigan]], the Anishinaabeg divided into six divisions, of which the Ojibwa was one of these six.  The first significant new Ojibwa culture-centre was their "fourth stopping place" on ''Manidoo Minising'' ([[Manitoulin Island]]).  Their first new political-centre was referred as their "fifth stopping place," in their present country at ''Baawiting'' ([[Sault Ste. Marie]]).  Continuing their westward expansion, the Ojibwa divided into the "northern branch" following the north-shore of [[Lake Superior]], and "southern branch" following the south-shore of the same lake.  In their expansion westward, the "northern branch" divided into a "westerly group" and a "southerly group."  The "southern branch" and the "southerly group" of the "northern branch" came together at their "sixth stopping place" on Spirit Island ({{coor dms|46|41|15|N|092|11|21|W|region:US}}) located in the [[Saint Louis River|St. Louis River]] estuary of [[Duluth, Minnesota|Duluth]]/[[Superior, Wisconsin|Superior]] region where the people were directed by the ''miigis'' being in a vision to go to the "place where there are food (i.e. [[wild rice]]) upon the waters."  Their second major settlement, referred as their "seventh stopping place," was at Shaugawaumikong (or ''Zhaagawaamikong'', French, ''[[Chequamegon Bay|Chequamegon]]'') on the southern shore of Lake Superior, near the present [[La Pointe, Wisconsin|La Pointe]] near [[Bayfield, Wisconsin]].  The "westerly group" of the "northern branch" continued their westward expansion along the [[Rainy River]], [[Red River of the North]], and across the northern [[Great Plains]] until reaching the [[Pacific Northwest]].  Along their migration to the west they came across many  ''miigis'', or cowry shells, as told in the prophecy.
+
According to the oral history of the [[Anishinaabeg]] and from their recordings in [[birch bark scrolls]], the Ojibwa came from the eastern areas of [[North America]], or [[Turtle Island (North America)|Turtle Island]] (the English language translation of many Native American tribes' name for the continent of North America), and from along the east coast. They [[trade]]d widely across the continent for thousands of years and knew of the [[canoe]] routes west and a land route to the West Coast.  
  
===Post-contact with Europeans===
+
When the Anishinaabeg were living on the shores of the "Great Salt Water" (presumably the [[Atlantic Ocean]] near the [[Gulf of St. Lawrence]]). They were instructed by seven [[prophet]]s to follow a sacred ''miigis'' shell, a [[whiteshell]] ([[cowry]]) toward the west, until they reached a place where food grew upon the water. They began their [[migration]] some time around 950 C.E., stopping at various points along the way, most significantly at ''Baawitigong,'' [[Sault Ste. Marie]], where they stayed for a long time, and where two subgroups decided to stay (these became the [[Potawatomi]] and [[Odawa people|Ottawa]]). Eventually they arrived at the [[wild rice]] lands of [[Minnesota]] and [[Wisconsin]] (wild rice being the food that grew upon the water) and made ''Mooningwanekaaning minis'' ([[Madeline Island]]: "Island of the [[yellow-shafted flicker]]") their new capital. In total, the migration took around five centuries.
[[Image:Eastman_Johnson_-_Kay_be_sen_day_way_We_Win_-_ejb_-_fig_101_-_pg_225.jpg|''Kay be sen day way We Win'' 1857|left|thumb|300px]]Their first historical mention occurs in the Jesuit Relation of 1640. Through their friendship with the French traders they were able to obtain guns and thus successfully end their hereditary wars with the [[Sioux]] and [[Fox (Native American)|Fox]]es on their west and south, with the result that the Sioux were driven out from the Upper [[Mississippi River|Mississippi]] region, and the Foxes forced down from northern [[Wisconsin]] and compelled to ally with the [[Sac (people)|Sauk]]. By the end of the [[eighteenth century]] the Ojibwa were the nearly unchallenged owners of almost all of present-day [[Michigan]], northern Wisconsin, and [[Minnesota]], including most of the [[Red River of the North|Red River]] area, together with the entire northern shores of Lakes [[Lake Huron|Huron]] and [[Lake Superior|Superior]] on the [[Canada|Canadian]] side and extending westward to the [[Turtle Mountain (plateau)|Turtle Mountain]]s of [[North Dakota]], where they became known as the [[Saulteaux|'''Plains Ojibwa''' or '''Saulteaux''']].
 
  
The Ojibwa were part of a long term alliance with the [[Ottawa (tribe)|Ottawa]] and [[Potawatomi]] [[First Nations]], called the [[Council of Three Fires]] and which fought with the [[Iroquois Confederacy]] and the [[Sioux]]. The Ojibwa expanded eastward taking over the lands alongside the eastern shores of [[Lake Huron]] and [[Georgian Bay]]. The Ojibwa allied themselves with the French in the [[French and Indian War]], and with the [[United Kingdom|British]] in the [[War of 1812]].
+
Following the migration there was a cultural divergence separating the Potawatomi from the Ojibwa and Ottawa. Particularly, the Potawatomi did not adopt the [[agriculture|agricultural]] innovations discovered or adopted by the Ojibwa, such as the [[Three Sisters (agriculture)|Three Sisters]] crop complex, [[copper]] tools, conjugal collaborative farming, and the use of [[canoe]]s in [[rice]] harvesting (Waldman 2006). Also, the Potawatomi [[division of labor|divided labor]] according to gender, much more than did the Ojibwa and Ottawa.
  
In the [[USA]], the government attempted to [[Indian removal|remove]] all the Ojibwa to Minnesota west of [[Mississippi River]] culminating in the [[Sandy Lake Tragedy]] and several hundred deaths.  Through the efforts of [[Chief Buffalo]] and popular opinion against Ojibwa removal, the bands east of the Mississippi were allowed to return to permanent reservations on ceded territory. A few families were removed to [[Kansas]] as part of the Potawatomi removal.
+
===Post-contact with Europeans===
 +
The first historical mention of the Ojibwa occurs in the ''[[Jesuit Relations|Jesuit Relation]]'' of 1640 under the name ''Baouichigouian,'' known by the French as ''Sauteurs'' because of their residence about the Sault de Ste. Marie (Thwaites 1640). In 1642, Raymbaut and Jogues found them at war with a people to their west, probably the [[Sioux]] (Hodge 1910).
  
In British North America, the cession of land by [[treaty]] or purchase was governed by the [[Royal Proclamation of 1763]] and subsequently most of the land in [[Upper Canada]] was ceded to the [[The Crown|Crown]].  Even with the Jay Treaty signed between the Crown and the United States, the then newly formed United States did not fully uphold the treaty, causing illegal immigration into Ojibwa and other Native American lands, which culminated in the Northwest War. Subsequently, much of the lands in [[Ohio]], [[Indiana]], [[Michigan]], parts of [[Illinois]] and [[Wisconsin]], and northern [[Minnesota]] and [[North Dakota]] were ceded to the United States.  However, provisions were made in many of the land cession treaties to allow for continued hunting, fishing and gathering of natural resources by the Ojibwe even after the land sales.  In northwestern [[Ontario]], [[Manitoba]], [[Saskatchewan]], and [[Alberta]] the numbered treaties were signed. [[British Columbia]] had no signed treaties until the late 1900's, and most areas have no treaties yet. There are ongoing treaty land entitlements to settle and negotiate. The treaties are constantly being reinterpreted by the courts because many of them are vague and difficult to apply in modern times. However, the numbered treaties were some of the most detailed treaties signed for their time. The Ojibwa Nation set the agenda and negotiated the first numbered treaties before they would allow safe passage of many more settlers to the prairies.
+
The Ojibwa were described as "equaling in physical appearance the best formed of the Northwest Indians, with the possible exception of the Foxes" and exhibited great determination and courage in their conflicts with their enemies (Hodge 1910). Yet they were friendly toward the French, and although they encountered missionaries [[Christianity]] took little hold, due to the power of their indigenous beliefs and their [[shaman]]s.
  
Often, earlier treaties were known as "Peace and Friendship Treaties" to establish community bonds between the Ojibwa and the European settlers.  These earlier treaties established the groundwork for cooperative resource sharing between the Ojibwa and the settlers. However, later treaties involving land cessions were seen as territorial advantages for both the United States and Canada, but the land cession terms were often not fully understood by the Ojibwa due to the cultural differences in understanding of the land.  For the governments of the United States and the Canada, land was considered a commodity of value that could be freely bought, owned and sold.  For the Ojibwa, land was considered a fully-shared resource, along with air, water and sunlight; concept of land sales or exclusive ownership of land was a foreign concept not known to the Ojibwa at the time of the treaty councils.  Consequently, today in both Canada and the United States, legal arguments in treaty-rights and treaty interpretations often bring to light the differences in cultural understanding of these treaty terms in order to come to legal understanding of the treaty obligations.
+
Through their friendship with the French traders, they were able to obtain [[gun]]s and thus successfully end their wars with the Sioux and [[Fox (tribe)|Fox]] on their west and south. The Sioux were driven out from the Upper [[Mississippi River|Mississippi]] region, and the Fox were forced down from northern [[Wisconsin]] and compelled to ally with the [[Sac (people)|Sauk]].  
  
See [[Ojibwa#Ojibwa Treaties|Treaty Timeline]] below - and see Individual Treaties with maps at [http://www.manitobachiefs.com/treaty/timeline.html#sectindividual].
+
By the end of the eighteenth century, the Ojibwa were the nearly unchallenged owners of almost all of present-day [[Michigan]], northern Wisconsin, and Minnesota, including most of the [[Red River of the North|Red River]] area, together with the entire northern shores of Lakes [[Lake Huron|Huron]] and [[Lake Superior|Superior]] on the Canadian side and extending westward to the [[Turtle Mountain (plateau)|Turtle Mountains]] of [[North Dakota]], where they became known as the Plains Ojibwa or ''Saulteaux.''
  
<!--Originally in the [[Anishinaabe]] article. Please re-word for a NPOV and un-comment-out this section.  Miigwech. [[User:CJLippert]]
+
The Ojibwa together with the [[Ottawa (tribe)|Ottawa]] and [[Potawatomi]] peoples formed the [[Council of Three Fires]] which fought with the [[Iroquois Confederacy]] and the Sioux. The Ojibwa expanded eastward, taking over the lands alongside the eastern shores of Lake Huron and [[Georgian Bay]]. The Ojibwa allied with the French in the [[French and Indian War]], and with the [[United Kingdom|British]] in the [[War of 1812]].
  
The relationship between the Anishinaabe and the American government has not always been a pleasant one.  The government attempted to relocate tribes from the entire [[United States]] to the west of the [[Mississippi River]] as the white pioneers colonized the areas.  After a period of time the goal of the government changed.  In the late 19th century, the government instead moved the tribes onto [[reservations]]. The government attempted to do this to the Anishinabe in the [[Keweenaw Peninsula]] in the [[Upper Peninsula]] of [[Michigan]].
+
In the U.S., the government attempted to [[Indian removal|remove]] all the Ojibwa to Minnesota west of Mississippi River, culminating in the [[Sandy Lake Tragedy]] and several hundred deaths. Through the efforts of [[Kechewaishke|Chief Buffalo]] and popular opinion against Ojibwa removal, the bands east of the Mississippi were allowed to return to permanent reservations on ceded territory. A few families were removed to [[Kansas]] as part of the Potawatomi removal.
  
The government’s main goal in the [[reservations]] was to [[Americanize]] the Anishinabe through breaking down their cultural heritage and putting them all in the same areas, according to Richard White.  There were two main people in the schemes to relocate the Natives to reservations in the late 19th century.  The first was George Manypenny who was the U.S. Commissioner of Indian Affairs from 1853 through 1857. Manypenny estimated that there were over seven thousand Indians living in the state that were “imbibing the worst vices of civilization” (White 2000) and that they were becoming “vitiated and degraded, a pest and a nuisance to the neighborhoods” (White 2000) they lived near.  Furthermore he stated that a small number of Indians who lived in Christian villages were gradually improving and “acquiring the habits and tastes of civilized life” (White 2000).  Here Manypenny displays how his attitude of religious superiority affected his decisions by attempting to convert these, in his eyes, heathens.  He decided that the most efficient way to make these heathens into functioning parts of society was to move them all into one area. He also decided that keeping the natives near to society would be the best solution, which took away the threat of moving them west, in [[Americanizing]] these [[Native Americans in the United States|Native Americans]].
+
In British North America, the cession of land by [[treaty]] or purchase was governed by the [[Royal Proclamation of 1763]], and subsequently most of the land in [[Upper Canada]] was ceded to [[Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Great Britain]]. Even with the [[Jay Treaty]] signed between the Great Britain and the United States, the newly formed United States did not fully uphold the treaty, causing illegal immigration into Ojibwa and other Native American lands, which culminated in the [[Northwest Indian War]]. Subsequently, much of the lands in [[Ohio]], [[Indiana]], Michigan, parts of [[Illinois]] and Wisconsin, and northern Minnesota and North Dakota were ceded to the United States. However, provisions were made in many of the land cession treaties to allow for continued hunting, fishing, and gathering of natural resources by the Ojibwa even after the land sales.
  
The second participant in these plots, Henry Gilbert, head of the Mackinac Agency, agreed with Manypenny in focusing the Anishinabe in single areas instead of allowing them to remain spread out in many small bands as stated by Richard White.  His reason, however, was different from that of Manypenny.  While Manypenny focused on what he believed to be moralistic life styles, Gilbert held a view of saving money for the government when relocating the natives.  Gilbert desired to relieve the government of federal obligations to the Indians by [[Americanizing]] them instead of allowing them to be a separate entity.  Manypenny and Gilbert worked together to create [[reservations]] so that large numbers of Native Americans would live in the same area to make them as American as those that originated from [[Europe]] and to become part of the “correct” religion.
+
The Saulteaux were originally settled around [[Lake Superior]] and [[Lake Winnipeg]], principally in the [[Sault Ste. Marie]] and [[northern Michigan]] areas. White Canadians and Americans gradually pushed the tribe westwards to [[Manitoba]], [[Saskatchewan]] and [[Alberta]], with one community in [[British Columbia]]. Today most of them live in the [[Interlake]], southern part of Manitoba, and in Saskatchewan; because they lived on land ill-suited for European crops, they were able to keep much of their land.  
  
[[Image:Ojibwa Chief.gif|thumb|Ne-bah-quah-om, Ojibwa chief]]
+
In northwestern Ontario, [[Manitoba]], [[Saskatchewan]], and [[Alberta]], the Ojibwa signed the numbered treaties in the nineteenth century. [[British Columbia]] had no signed treaties until the late twentieth century. These numbered treaties were some of the most detailed treaties signed for their time.  
The government continually weakened the Anishinabe by taking away their history and the natives could not stop them once they started.  Yet why were they allowed to start this?  The reason is that, in the eyes of the Anishinabe, every person and every tribe are “nii-kon-nis-as” (Bento-Banai) which translated to “brothers.”  These people believed that the only difference among each tribe was the way they speak and their language (Bento-Banai). So the natives allowed all of these actions to start because they trusted the white men. The settlers were deemed brothers and the Indians believed that brothers would not lie to them.  Once the new settlers worked their way into the council of the Native Americans, they could not be stopped.  They began by coming in small bands in which they gained the trust of the natives and were given a seat among the council fires.  Then more and more pioneers came into this country and kept requesting a larger seat until the settlers became the majority and the natives the minority.
 
  
Now the new minorities are fighting to keep their land, because “[they] love the spot where [their] Fore fathers bones [were] laid and [they desired] that [their] bones may rest besides [their Fore fathers] also” (White2000). This statement shows the importance of the land that has been taken away from the Anishinabe. American society has learned to respect and honor their dead.  They create vast areas of land for the dead to be laid, and they raise monuments of varying sizes over them.  However they will not allow those that lived in this land before them to honor their own dead and, after traveling the trail of life, to be able to lie down beside them.
+
Often, earlier treaties were known as "Peace and Friendship Treaties" to establish community bonds between the Ojibwa and the European settlers. These earlier treaties established the groundwork for cooperative resource sharing between the Ojibwa and the settlers. However, later treaties involving land cessions were seen as territorial advantages for both the United States and Canada, but the land cession terms were often not fully understood by the Ojibwa because of the cultural differences in understanding of the land. For the governments of the US and Canada, land was considered a commodity of value that could be freely bought, owned and sold. For the Ojibwa, land was considered a fully-shared resource, along with air, water and sunlight; the concept of land sales or exclusive [[ownership]] of land was foreign to the Ojibwa at the time of the treaty councils. Consequently, legal arguments in treaty-rights and treaty interpretations continue to bring to light the differences in cultural understanding of these treaty terms.
 
 
The white man has taken everything from the Native Americans.  All that the Anishinabe can really call their own are their burial plots alongside their ancestors, and even those they must fight for.  What was once a vast environment that was shared among various tribes has been taken away, through both force, deception and misunderstanding, until the last real amount of land that can be owned by this once vast group is broken into small plots that are roughly six feet long, four feet wide, and located six feet under the ground.
 
 
 
* Bento-Banai, Edward (2004). Creation- From the Ojibwa. The Mishomis Book.
 
* White, Richard (July 31, 2000). Chippewas of the Sault. The Sault Tribe News.
 
 
 
—>
 
  
 
==Culture==
 
==Culture==
 +
Most Ojibwa were of the [[Woodlands culture]], [[hunter-gatherer]]s who harvested [[wild rice]] and [[maple sugar]]. They had no [[salt]] and so used [[maple syrup]] as a [[preservative]] to preserve their food (Sultzman 2000). However, the Ojibwa lived across a wide area and adapted to their local environments.
  
[[Image:Eastman_Johnson_-_Ojibwe_Wigwam_at_Grand_Portage_-_ebj_-_fig_22_pg_41.jpg|thumb|200px|left|''Ojibwe Wigwam at Grand Portage'' - Unknown]]
+
The eastern Ojibwa lived a [[sedentism|sedentary]] lifestyle, engaging in [[fishing]], [[hunting]], the [[farming]] of [[maize]] and [[Squash (vegetable)|squash]], and the harvesting of ''Manoomin'' ([[wild rice]]). The Plains Ojibwa farmed little and were mainly hunters and fishers, adopting the culture of the [[Plains Indians]], hunting [[bison|buffalo]]. A third group were known as the "Bungee," a transitional culture between the eastern Woodlands and the western [[Plains Indian|Plains culture]].
The Ojibwa live in groups (otherwise known as "bands").  Most Ojibwa, except for the Plains bands, lived a sedentary lifestyle, engaging in [[fishing]], [[hunting]], the [[farming]] of [[maize]] and [[Squash (vegetable)|squash]], and the harvesting of Manoomin ([[wild rice]]). Their typical dwelling was the '''wiigiwaam''' ([[wigwam]]), built either as a '''waaginogaan''' (domed-lodge) or as a '''nasawa'ogaan''' (pointed-lodge), made of [[birch]] [[bark]], [[juniper]] bark and [[willow]] saplings. They also developed a form of pictorial [[writing]] used in religious rites of the [[Midewiwin]] and recorded on [[birch bark scrolls]] and possibly on rock.  The sacred scrolls are complicated with a lot of historical, geometrical, and mathematical knowledge communicated through the many complex pictures.  The ''miigis'' shell ([[cowry]] shell) was also used in ceremonies, and this shell can only be found from far away coastal areas, indicating a vast trade network at some time across the continent.  The use and trade of [[copper]] across the continent is also proof of a very large area of trading that took place thousands of years ago, as far back as the [[Hopewell culture]].  Certain types of rock used for spear and arrow heads were also traded over large distances.  The use of [[petroforms]], [[petroglyphs]], and [[pictographs]] was common throughout their traditional territories.  Petroforms and [[medicine wheels]] were a way to teach the important concepts of four directions, astronomical observations about the seasons, and as a memorizing tool for certain stories and beliefs. 
+
[[Image:Eastman Johnson - Ojibwe Wigwam at Grand Portage - ebj - fig 22 pg 41.jpg|thumb|200px|left|Details of ''Ojibwe Wigwam at Grand Portage'' by [[Eastman Johnson]] ]]
 +
The typical Ojibwa dwelling was the ''wiigiwaam'' ([[wigwam]]), built either as a ''waaginogaan'' (domed-lodge) or as a ''nasawa'ogaan'' (pointed-lodge), made of [[birch bark]], [[juniper]] bark and [[willow]] saplings.  
  
The Ojibwe people and culture are alive and growing today. During the summer months, the people attend '''jiingotamog''' for the spiritual and '''niimi'idimaa''' for a social gathering ([[pow-wow]]s  or "pau waus") at various reservations in the ''Anishinaabe-Aki'' (Anishinaabe Country). Many people still follow the traditional ways of harvesting wild rice, picking berries, hunting, making medicines, and making [[Sugar maple|maple]] [[maple sugar|sugar]].  Many of the Ojibwa take part in [[sun dance]] ceremonies across the continent.  The sacred scrolls are also kept hidden away until those that are worthy and respect them are given permission to see them and then to interpret them properly.
+
They also developed a form of pictorial writing used in religious rites of the [[Midewiwin]] and recorded on birch bark [[scroll]]s and sometimes on rock. The many complex pictures on the sacred scrolls communicate historical, geometrical, and mathematical knowledge. Ceremonies also used the ''miigis'' shell ([[cowry]] shell), which is naturally found in far away coastal areas; this fact suggests that there was a vast trade network across the continent at some time. The use and trade of [[copper]] across the continent is also proof of a very large area of trading that took place thousands of years ago, as far back as the [[Hopewell culture]]. Certain types of rock used for spear and [[arrow head]]s were also traded over large distances. The use of [[petroform]]s, [[petroglyph]]s, and [[pictograph]]s was common throughout their traditional territories. Petroforms and [[medicine wheel]]s were a way to teach the important concepts of four directions, [[astronomy|astronomical]] observations about the seasons, and as a memorizing tool for certain stories and beliefs.
  
The Ojibwa would bury their dead in a [[burial mound]]; many erect a ''jiibegamig'' or a "spirit-house" over each mound. Instead of a headstone with the deceased's name inscribed upon it, a traditional burial mound would typically have a wooden marker, inscribed with the deceased's ''doodem''.  Due to the distinct features of these burials, Ojibwa graves have been often looted by grave robbers.  In the United States, many Ojibwa communities safe-guard their burial mounds through the enforcement of the [[Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act]].
+
The Ojibwa would bury their dead in a [[burial mound]]; many erect a ''jiibegamig'' or a "spirit-house" over each mound. Instead of a headstone with the deceased's name inscribed upon it, a traditional burial mound would typically have a wooden marker, inscribed with the deceased's ''doodem.''  
  
Several Ojibwa bands in the United States cooperate in the [[Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission]], which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the [[Lake Superior]]-[[Lake Michigan]] areas. The commission follows the directives of U.S. agencies to run several wilderness areas.  See [[List of U.S. state and tribal wilderness areas]].  Some Minnesota Ojibwa tribal councils cooperate in the [[1854 Authority]], which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the [[Arrowhead Region]]. In Michigan, the [http://www.1836CORA.org 1836 Chippewa-Ottawa Resource Authority] manages the hunting, fishing and gathering rights about Sault Ste. Marie, and the waters of Lakes Michigan and [[Lake Huron|Huron]]. In Canada, the [http://www.treaty3.ca/adminoffice/natural-resources.php Grand Council of Treaty #3] manages the [[Treaty 3]] hunting and fishing rights around [[Lake of the Woods]].
+
The Ojibwa viewed the world in two types: animate and inanimate, rather than male and female [[gender]]s. As an animate a person could serve the society as a male-role or a female-role. [[John Tanner (narrator)|John Tanner]], who spent 30 years living as an Ojibwa after having been [[kidnap]]ped, documented in his ''Narrative'' that Ojibwa peoples do not fall into the European ideas of gender and its gender-roles, having people who fulfill mixed gender roles, [[two-spirit]]s or ''egwakwe'' (Anglicised to "agokwa"). A well-known ''egwakwe'' warrior and guide in Minnesota history was [[Ozaawindib]]. Tanner described Ozaawindib as "This man was one of those who make themselves women, and are called women by the Indians" (Tanner 2007).
  
===Kinship and Clan system===
+
===Clan and kinship systems===
 
{{main|Anishinaabe clan system}}
 
{{main|Anishinaabe clan system}}
 +
The Ojibwa people were divided into a number of ''odoodeman'' ([[clan]]s; singular: ''odoodem'') named primarily for animal [[totem]]s ''(doodem)''. Five original totems were ''Wawaazisii'' ([[Brown bullhead|Bullhead]]), ''Baswenaazhi'' ([[Crane (bird)|Crane]]), ''Aan'aawenh'' ([[Pintail]] Duck), ''Nooke'' ([[Bear]]) and ''Moozwaanowe'' ("Little" [[Moose]]-tail). The clans had distinct responsibilities that worked together to care for the people, such as [[chieftain]]ship, a type of [[police]], [[teacher]]s, spiritual guides, and so forth (Schneider 2003). Traditionally, each band had a self-regulating council consisting of leaders of the communities' clans, with the band often identified by the principle ''doodem.''
  
Ojibwa understanding of [[kinship]] is complex, taking into account of the not only the immediate family but also the extended family. It is considered a modified [[Iroquois kinship|Bifurcate merging]] [[Kinship and descent|kinship system]]. Siblings generally share the same term with [[parallel cousin|parallel-cousin]]s as with any Bifurcate merging kinship system since they all part of the same clan, but the modified system allows for younger sibling to share the same kinship term with younger cross-cousins. In addition the complexity wanes as one goes away from the speaker's immediate generation, with some degree of complexity retained with female relatives (for example, ''ninooshenh'' is "my mother's sister" or "my father's sister-in-law"—i.e., my parallel-aunt—but also "my parent's female cross-cousin").  In both with the great-grandparents and older generations and with the great-grandchildren and younger generations, the Ojibwa collectively calls them ''aanikoobijigan''. This sign of kinship/clans speaks of the very nature of the Anishinaabe's entire philosophy/lifestyle, that is of interconnectedness and balance between all living generations and all generations of the past and of the future.
+
Ojibwa understanding of kinship is complex, and includes not only the immediate family but also the extended family. It is considered a modified [[Iroquois kinship|bifurcate merging]] [[Kinship and descent|kinship system]]. As with any bifurcate merging kinship system, siblings generally share the same term with [[parallel cousin|parallel-cousin]]s, because they are all part of the same clan. Complexity wanes further from the speaker's immediate generation, but some complexity is retained with female relatives. For example, ''ninooshenh'' is "my mother's sister" or "my father's sister-in-law"—my parallel-aunt—and also "my parent's female cross-cousin." Great-grandparents and older generations, as well as great-grandchildren and younger generations are collectively called ''aanikoobijigan.'' This system of kinship speaks of the nature of the Anishinaabe's philosophy and lifestyle, that is of interconnectedness and balance between all living generations and all generations of the past and of the future.
 
 
The Ojibwe people were divided into a number of '''odoodeman''' (clans; singular: ''odoodem'') named primarily for animal [[totem]]s (or ''[[doodem]]'', as an Ojibwe person would say this word in English).  The five original totems were ''Wawaazisii'' ([[Brown bullhead|Bullhead]]), ''Baswenaazhi'' (Echo-maker, i.e., [[Crane (bird)|Crane]]), ''Aan'aawenh'' ([[Pintail]] Duck), ''Nooke'' (Tender, i.e., [[Bear]]) and ''Moozwaanowe'' ("Little" [[Moose]]-tail).  The Crane totem was the most vocal among the Ojibwa, and the Bear was the largest—so large, in fact, that it was sub-divided into body parts such as the head, the ribs and the feet.
 
  
Traditionally, each band had a self-regulating council consisting of leaders of the communities' clans or ''odoodeman'', with the band often identified by the principle ''doodem''. In meeting others, the traditional greeting among the Ojibwe peoples is "What is your ''doodem''?" ("''Aaniin, odoodemaayan?''") in order to establish a social conduct between the two meeting parties as family, friends or enemies. Today, the greeting has been shortened to "''Aaniin''."
+
===Spiritual beliefs - Midewiwin===
 +
{{main|Anishinaabe traditional beliefs|Midewiwin}}
 +
[[Image:Underwater Panther rock painting (crop).jpg|right|250px|thumb|Pictographs of a ''[[mishibizhiw]]'' ("underwater panther") as well as two snakes and a canoe, attributed to the Ojibwa. From [[Lake Superior Provincial Park]], [[Ontario, Canada]].]]
 +
Before contact with Europeans, Ojibwa religion had little formal ceremony. They relied on [[shaman]]s for healing by use of medicinal herbs. Contact with Europeans exposed them not just to a different culture but to new [[disease]]s against which they had little or no defense. Efforts to deal with sickness evolved into the complex [[Midewiwin]] Grand Medicine Society, a [[secret society]] whose qualified members performed elaborate ceremonies (Sultzman 2000).
  
===Spiritual beliefs===
+
The Ojibwa have a number of spiritual beliefs passed down by [[oral tradition]] under the [[Midewiwin]] teachings. These include a [[creation myth]] and a recounting of the origins of ceremonies and rituals. Spiritual beliefs and rituals were very important to the Ojibwa because spirits guided them through life. Birch bark scrolls and petroforms were used to pass along knowledge and information, as well as used for ceremonies. [[Pictograph]]s were also used for ceremonies.
{{main|Anishinaabe traditional beliefs}}
 
  
The Ojibwa have a number of spiritual beliefs passed down by [[oral tradition]] under the [[Midewiwin]] teachings. These include a [[Creation within belief systems#Ojibwa|creation narrative]] and a recounting of the origins of ceremonies and rituals. Spiritual beliefs and rituals were very important to the Ojibwa because spirits guided them through life.  [[Birch bark scrolls]] and [[Petroforms]] were used to pass along knowledge and information, as well as used for ceremonies. [[Pictographs]] were also used for ceremonial use. The [[sweatlodge]] is still used during important ceremonies about the four directions and to pass along the oral history of the people.  Teaching lodges are still common today to teach the next generations about the language and ancient ways of the past.  These old ways, ideas, and teachings are still preserved today with these living ceremonies.
+
====''Aadizookaan''====
 +
Traditional stories known as the ''aadizookaanan'' ("traditional stories," singular ''aadizookaan'') are told by the ''debaajimojig'' ("story-tellers," singular ''debaajimod''), only in winter in order to preserve their transformative powers. In the ''aadizookaan'' many '''[[manidoo]]g'' ("spiritual beings") are encountered. These include, but are not limited to:
 +
;Gitchi-manidoo
 +
[[Gitche Manitou|''Gichi-manidoo'']] (''Gitchi Manitou'', ''Gitche Manito'') is the "Great Spirit," God, the Creator of all things and the Giver of Life, sometimes translated as the "Great Mystery." ''Manitou'' is an Anishinaabe word for spirit, spiritual, mystery, mysterious, or deity. Historically, Anishinaabe people believed in a variety of spirits, whose images were placed near doorways for protection. With the coming of [[Christian]] missionaries and their need to translate the idea of [[monotheism]], ''Gitche Manitou'' meaning "Great Spirit" was coined. The term ''Manitou'' itself refers to the concept of one aspect of the interconnection and balance of nature/life; in simpler terms it can refer to a spirit. This spirit is seen as a (contactable) person as well as a concept. Everything has its own manitou—every plant, every stone and even machines. These ''Manitous'' do not exist in a hierarchy like European gods/goddesses, but are more akin to one part of the body interacting with another and the spirit of everything; the collective is named ''Gitche Manitou.''
 +
;Nanabozho
 +
''[[Nanabozho]]'' (also known by a variety of other names and spellings, including ''Wenabozho,'' ''Menabozho,'' and ''Nanabush'') figures prominently in Anishinaabe storytelling, including the story of the world's creation. Nanabozho is the Ojibwa [[trickster]] figure and [[culture hero]] (these two [[archetype]]s are often combined into a single figure in [[First Nations]] mythologies). He was the son of ''Wiininwaa'' ("Nourishment"), a human mother, and ''E-bangishimog'' ("In the West"), a spirit father. He was sent to Earth in the form of a [[rabbit]] by ''Gitchi Manitou'' to teach the Ojibwa, and one of his first tasks was to name all the plants and animals.  
  
===In popular culture===
+
Nanabozho is considered to be the founder of [[Midewiwin]]. He features as the protagonist of a cycle of stories that serve as the [[Anishinaabe]] origin [[Mythology|myth]]. The cycle, which varies somewhat from community to community, tells the story of Nanabozho's conception, birth, and his ensuing adventures, which involve interactions with [[Manitou|spirit]] and animal beings, the creation of the Earth, and the establishment of the Midewiwin. The myth cycle explains the origin of several traditions, including [[mourning]] customs, beliefs about the [[afterlife]], and the creation of the sacred plant ''asemaa'' ([[tobacco]]).
 +
;Bagwajinini
 +
[[Bagwajiwinini]]wag is Anishinaabe for [[Bigfoot]] or [[Sasquatch]], literally meaning "Wildmen" or "Wildernessmen." In the ''aadizookaan,'' they represent honesty.
 +
;E-bangishimog
 +
''[[E-bangishimog]]'' is the west [[wind]], ''manidoo'' of ultimate [[destiny]]. E-bangishimog's children include ''[[Majiikiwis]],'' ''[[Jiibayaabooz]],'' and ''Nanabozho.''
 +
;Jiibayaabooz
 +
''[[Jiibayaabooz]]'' is a "Spirit Rabbit" who taught methods of [[communication]] with the ''[[manidoo]]g'' through [[dream]]s, [[vision quest]]s, and purification ceremonies. He is the "Chief of the Underworld."
 +
;Nibiinaabewag
 +
''[[Nibiinaabe|Nibiinaabewag/niibinaabekwewag]]'' ("Watermen"/"Waterman-women," singular ''nibiinaabe/nibiinaabekwe'') are [[Merman|mermen]] and [[mermaid]]s.
 +
;Nookomis
 +
[[Nokomis|''Nookomis'']] (the "Grandmother") is the [[Mother Earth|Earth-Mother]], the one from whom is derived the Water of Life, who feeds plants, animals, and men. She is also known as ''Ogashiinan'' ("Dearest Mother"), ''[[Omizakamigokwe]]'' ("Throughout the Earth Woman") or ''[[Giizhigookwe]]'' ("Sky Woman").
 +
;Wiindigoog
 +
[[Wendigo|''Wiindigoog'']] (singular ''wiindigoo'', Anglicized to Wendigo) are giant, powerful, malevolent [[cannibalism|cannibalistic]] spirits associated with the Winter and the North. If a human ever resorts to cannibalism to survive, they are said to become possessed by the spirit of a ''wiindigoo,'' and develop an overpowering desire for more human flesh.
 +
;Wiininwaa
 +
''[[Wenonah|Wiininwaa]]'' ("Nourishment") is a woman who became immortal through ''manidoowiziwin'' (the process of taking on qualities of a ''Manitou''). She is the daughter of Nookomis and mother of Nanabozho.
  
The legend of the Ojibwa "[[Windigo]]," in which tribesmen identify with a cannibalistic monster and prey on their families, is a story with many meanings, one of them points to the consequences of greed and the destruction that results from it. It is mentioned in the fiction of [[Thomas Pynchon]]. In his story ''Of Father's and Sons'', [[Ernest Hemingway]] uses two Ojibway as secondary characters.  
+
====Migration story====
 +
According to the oral history, seven great ''miigis'' (radiant/iridescent) beings appeared to the peoples in the [[Abenaki|''Waabanakiing'']] (Land of the Dawn or Eastern Land) to teach the peoples of the [[midewiwin|''mide'' way]] of life. However, one of the seven great ''miigis'' beings was too spiritually powerful and killed the peoples in the ''Waabanakiing'' when the people were in its presence. The six great ''miigis'' beings remained to teach while the one returned into the ocean. The six great ''miigis'' beings then established ''doodem'' (clans) for the peoples in the east. Then these six ''miigis'' beings returned into the ocean as well. If the seventh ''miigis'' being stayed, it would have established the [[Thunderbird (mythology)|Thunderbird]] ''doodem.''
  
During the sixth season of ''[[The Sopranos]]'', an old Ojibwe proverb is shown in prominence and quoted in at least three episodes.
+
At a later time, one of these ''miigis'' beings appeared in a vision to relate a [[prophecy]]. The prophecy stated that if more of the Anishinaabeg did not move further west, they would not be able to keep their traditional ways alive because of the many new settlements and European immigrants that would arrive soon in the east. Their migration path would be symbolized by a series of smaller Turtle Islands, which was confirmed with ''miigis'' shells ([[cowry]] shells). After receiving assurance from the their "Allied Brothers" ([[Mi'kmaq]]) and "Father" ([[Abnaki]]) of their safety in having many more of the Anishinaabeg move inland, they advanced along the [[St. Lawrence River]] to the [[Ottawa River]] to [[Lake Nipissing]], and then to the [[Great Lakes]]. First of these smaller Turtle Islands was ''Mooniyaa,'' which ''Mooniyaang'' ([[Montreal, Quebec]]) now stands. The "second stopping place" was in the vicinity of the ''Wayaanag-gakaabikaa'' (Concave Waterfalls, [[Niagara Falls]]). At their "third stopping place" near the present-day city of [[Detroit, Michigan]], the Anishinaabeg divided into six divisions, of which the Ojibwa was one of these six. The first significant new Ojibwa culture-center was their "fourth stopping place" on ''Manidoo Minising'' ([[Manitoulin Island]]). Their first new political-centre was referred as their "fifth stopping place," in their present country at ''Baawiting'' (Sault Ste. Marie).  
  
In the comic strip ''[[For Better or For Worse]]'', Elizabeth was a schoolteacher in [[Mtigwaki]], a fictional Ojibwa village in Northern Ontario.
+
Continuing their westward expansion, the Ojibwa divided into the "northern branch" following the north shore of [[Lake Superior]], and "southern branch" following the south shore of the same lake. In their expansion westward, the "northern branch" divided into a "westerly group" and a "southerly group." The "southern branch" and the "southerly group" of the "northern branch" came together at their "sixth stopping place" on Spirit Island located in the [[Saint Louis River|St. Louis River]] estuary of [[Duluth, Minnesota|Duluth]]/[[Superior, Wisconsin|Superior]] region where the people were directed by the ''miigis'' being in a vision to go to the "place where there is food ([[wild rice]]) upon the waters."  Their second major settlement, referred as their "seventh stopping place," was at Shaugawaumikong (or ''Zhaagawaamikong,'' French, ''[[Chequamegon Bay|Chequamegon]]'') on the southern shore of Lake Superior, near the present [[La Pointe, Wisconsin|La Pointe]] near [[Bayfield, Wisconsin]]. The "westerly group" of the "northern branch" continued their westward expansion along the [[Rainy River]], [[Red River of the North]], and across the northern [[Great Plains]] until reaching the [[Pacific Northwest]]. Along their migration to the west they came across many ''miigis,'' or cowry shells, as told in the [[prophecy]].
  
Novelist [[Louise Erdrich]] is Anishinabe and has written about characters from her culture in ''Tracks'', ''Love Medicine'', and ''The Bingo Queen.'' Medicine woman [[Keewaydinoquay Peschel]] has written books on ethnobotany and books for children. [[Winona LaDuke]] is a popular political and intellectual voice for the Anishinabe people.
+
====Deluge====
 +
{{Main|Deluge (mythology)}}
 +
The Ojibwa also have a story of a [[Deluge (mythology)|Great Deluge]] that has been passed down from generation to generation over the centuries. They tell of a time long ago when the [[Anishinaabeg]] began to argue amongst themselves and lost respect for all living creatures. The Creator, ''Gichi Manidoo,'' saw this situation and brought a great flood on the earth, killing almost every person and living thing. This [[punishment]] is a lesson that has guided Ojibwa lifestyle, teaching them to live in harmony with all creation (Cubie 2007).
  
Literary theorist and writer [[Gerald Vizenor]] has drawn extensively on Anishinabe philosophies of language.
+
===Traditions and ceremonies===
 +
Objects like [[drum]]s, [[pipe]]s, and [[tobacco]] play significant roles in ceremonies. A drum represents the "circle of life" and must undergo a special ceremony before it can be used to heal and unify people (Schneider 2003).
  
==Dreamcatchers==
+
====Tobacco====
 +
''Asemaa'' (Tobacco) represents [[east]]. Though pure tobacco is commonly used today, traditionally "[[kinnikinnick]]"—a ''giniginige'' ("mixture") of primarily [[red osier dogwood]] with [[bearberry]] and tobacco, and occasionally with other additional medicinal plants—was used. The tobacco or its mixture is used in the offering of prayer, acting as a medium for communication. It is either offered through the fire so the smoke can lift the prayers to the [[Gichi-manidoo]], or it is set on the ground in a clean place as an offering. This is done on a daily basis as each new day is greeted with prayers of thankfulness. [[Tobacco]] is also the customary offering when seeking knowledge or advice from an Elder or when a Pipe is present.
  
[[Image:Atrapasuenos.jpg|thumb|250px|A dreamcatcher.]]
+
====Dreamcatchers====
In [[Ojibwa]] (Chippewa)  culture, a '''dreamcatcher''' (or '''dream catcher'''; [[Anishinaabe language|Ojibwe]] '''''asabikeshiinh''''', the [[Ojibwe grammar#Gender|inanimate]] form of the word for "spider"<ref name="freelang">[http://www.freelang.net/dictionary/ojibwe.html Freelang Ojibwe Dictionary]. Freelang. Retrieved November 7, 2007.</ref>) is a handmade object based on a [[willow]] hoop, on which is woven a loose [[net (device)|net]] or [[spider web|web]]. The dreamcatcher is then decorated with personal and sacred items such as feathers and beads.
+
{{Main|Dreamcatcher}}
 +
[[Image:Atrapasuenos.jpg|thumb|200px|left|A dreamcatcher.]]
 +
A [[dreamcatcher]] (or dream catcher; [[Anishinaabe language|Ojibwe]] ''asabikeshiinh'', is a handmade object based on a [[willow]] hoop. Traditionally, the Ojibwa construct dreamcatchers by tying sinew strands in a web around a small round or tear-shaped frame (in a way roughly similar to their method for making [[snowshoe]] webbing). The dreamcatcher is decorated with personal and sacred items such as feathers and beads.  
  
===Origin and legends===
+
The resulting "dream-catcher," hung above the bed, is then used to protect sleeping children from nightmares. The Ojibwa believe that a dreamcatcher filters a person's dreams: Only good dreams would be allowed to filter through; bad dreams would stay in the net, disappearing with the light of day (Andrews 1997).
While dreamcatchers originated in the Ojibwa Nation, during the [[pan-Indian movement]] of the 1960s and 1970s they were adopted by [[Native Americans of the United States|Native American]]s of a number of different Nations.  They came to be seen by some as a symbol of unity among the various Indian Nations, and as a general symbol of identification with Native American or [[First Nations]] cultures.  However, other Native Americans have come to see them as "tacky" and over-commercialized.
 
[[Image:dreamcatcher.jpg|thumb|300px|left|Dreamcatchers.]]
 
  
Traditionally, the Ojibwa construct dreamcatchers by tying sinew strands in a web around a small round or tear-shaped frame (in a way roughly similar to their method for making [[snowshoe]] webbing).  The resulting "dream-catcher," hung above the bed, is then used as a charm to protect sleeping children from nightmares.
+
====Jingle dress====
 +
{{Main|Jingle dress}}
 +
[[Image:JingleDress1.jpg|thumb|A contemporary jingle dress]]
 +
The "jingle dress" is a dance dress worn by women participating in the "Jingle Dress Dance" at a [[Pow wow]]. Made of cloth, the dress includes several rows of metal cones, which are sewn across the dress on the skirt (and blouse, in some areas). The metal cones create a jingling sound as the dancer moves. The Jingle Dress Dance is characterized by light footwork danced close to the ground. The dancer dances in a [[snake]]-like pattern around the drum; her feet never cross, nor does she dance backward or turn a complete circle.
  
The Ojibwa believe that a dreamcatcher filters a person's dreams. According to Terri J. Andrews in the article "Legend of the Dream Catcher," about the Ojibwa nation in the magazine ''World & I'', Nov. 1998 page 204, "Only good dreams would be allowed to filter through . . .  Bad dreams would stay in the net, disappearing with the light of day."
+
The jingle dress is considered a healing dress. Its origin is attributed to several Ojibwa communities in which a vivid recurring dream was experienced. The dream came to a ''Midewinini,'' a medicine-man or [[shaman]]. In the dream there were four women, each wearing a jingle dress and dancing. The dream also gave instructions on how to make the dresses, what types of songs went with them, and how the dance was to be performed. The story continues that the reason for this recurring dream was because the daughter (in some versions the grand-daughter) of the ''Midewinini'' was gravely ill. When the dance was performed in the presence of the child, in the way shown in the dream, the child recovered.
 
Another legend ([[Lakota]]), according to [[St. Joseph's Indian School]] in [[Chamberlain, South Dakota]], "Good dreams pass through the center hole to the sleeping person. The bad dreams are trapped in the web, where they perish in the light of dawn."
 
 
 
===Popularization===
 
In the course of becoming popular outside of the Ojibwa Nation, and then outside of the pan-Indian communities, "dreamcatchers" are now made, exhibited and sold by some [[New age]] groups and individuals.  According to [[Philip Jenkins]], this is considered by most traditional Native peoples and their supporters to be an undesirable form of [[cultural appropriation]].<ref>Jenkins, Philip. 2004. ''Dream Catchers: How Mainstream America Discovered Native Spirituality''. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195161157.</ref>
 
 
 
The official portrait of [[Ralph Klein]], former Premier of the [[Canada|Canadian]] province of [[Alberta]], incorporates a dreamcatcher.<ref>[http://www.cbc.ca/canada/edmonton/story/2007/08/30/klein-portrait.html?ref=rss Ralph Klein breaks tradition in legislature portrait]. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved November 7, 2007.</ref>
 
  
 +
This happened around 1900 and spread throughout Ojibwa reservations. In the late 1920s, the jingle dress was given to the [[Lakota people|Lakota]] and it spread westward into the Dakotas and Montana.
  
 +
====Snowshoe dance====
 +
[[Image:Ojibwa dance.jpg|thumb|left|250 px|right|Ancient Ojibwa tradition: The Snowshoe Dance, performed at the first snowfall every year since time immemorial, by George Catlin 1835.]]
 +
Every year at the first snow, a traditional Snowshoe dance is performed. This dance celebrates the coming of the snow, an essential part of the cycle of life for which they give thanks, and also reminds them of the necessity for snowshoes to aid them in traveling through snow in order to hunt and they dance in hope of a successful hunt and thus to survive the winter. The snowshoe dance was performed around a tall pole with a pair of snowshoes suspended from the top.
  
 +
<blockquote>The snow-shoe dance … is exceedingly picturesque, being danced with the snow shoes under the feet, at the falling of the first snow in the beginning of winter, when they sing a song of thanksgiving to the Great Spirit for sending them a return of snow, when they can run on their snow shoes in their valued hunts, and easily take the game for their food (Catlin 1995).</blockquote>
 +
 +
====Sweat lodge====
 +
{{Main|Sweat lodge}}
 +
[[Sweat lodge]]s are very important in Ojibwa spiritual life. A visit to the sweat lodge cleanses both the body and spirit. Supported by [[fasting]] and [[meditation]], the sweat lodge is a place to receive guidance on how to live one's life in accord with the spirits (Schneider 2003).
  
 +
====Sun dance====
 +
{{Main|Sun Dance}}
 +
The [[Sun Dance]] (known as the Rain Dance among the Saulteaux) is a [[ceremony]] practiced by a number of Native Americans, particularly the [[Plains Indians]]. There are distinct rituals and methods of performing the dance, but they generally include [[dance|dancing]], [[singing]], [[praying]], drumming, the experience of [[Vision (religion)|visions]], [[fasting]], and in some cases [[piercing]] of the chest or back. Most notable for early Western observers was the piercing many young men endure as part of the ritual. The object of being pierced is to sacrifice one's self to the Great Spirit, and to pray while connected to the Tree of Life, a direct connection to the Great Spirit. Breaking from the piercing is done in one moment, as the man runs backwards from the tree at a time specified by the leader of the dance. 
  
 +
The Government of Canada officially persecuted Sun Dance practitioners and attempted to suppress the Sun Dance on many Canadian plains reserves starting in 1882 until the 1940s. The flesh-sacrifice and gift-giving features were legally outlawed in 1895. Despite the subjugation, Sun Dance practitioners, including Saulteaux, continued to hold Sun Dances throughout the persecution period, minus the prohibited features. At least one Cree or Saulteaux Rain Dance has occurred each year since 1880 somewhere on the Canadian Plains. In 1951 government officials revamped the Indian Act and dropped the legislation that forbade flesh-sacrificing and gift-giving (Pettipas 1994).
  
 +
==Contemporary Ojibwa==
 +
Contemporary Ojibwa still use the [[sweat lodge]] during important ceremonies and to pass along their oral history. Teaching lodges are common to teach the next generations about the language and ancient ways of the past. Many people still follow the traditional ways of harvesting [[wild rice]], picking [[Berry|berries]], hunting, making medicines, and making [[maple sugar]]. Many of the Ojibwa take part in [[sun dance]] ceremonies across the continent.
  
==Bands and First Nations of Ojibwe people==
+
Several Ojibwa bands in the United States cooperate in the [[Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission]], which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the [[Lake Superior]]-[[Lake Michigan]] areas. The commission follows the directives of U.S. agencies to run [[List of U.S. state and tribal wilderness areas|several wilderness areas]]. Some Minnesota Ojibwa tribal councils cooperate in the [[1854 Treaty Authority]], which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the [[Arrowhead Region]]. In Michigan, the Chippewa-Ottawa Resource Authority manages the hunting, fishing and gathering rights about Sault Ste. Marie, and the waters of Lake Michigan and [[Lake Huron]]. In Canada, the Grand Council of Treaty #3 manages the [[Treaty 3]] hunting and fishing rights around [[Lake of the Woods]].
[[Image:Rocky Boy Chippewa chief.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Chippewa chief [[Rocky Boy]]]]
 
Warren, in his ''History of the Ojibway People'', records 10 major divisions of the Ojibwa in the United States, omitting the Ojibwa located in [[Michigan]], western [[Minnesota]] and westward, and all of [[Canada]]; however, when if major historical bands located Michigan and Ontario are added, the count becomes 14:
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
! English Name
 
! Ojibwa Name<br/>(in Double-vowel spelling)
 
! Location
 
|-
 
| [[Saulteaux]]
 
| ''Baawitigowininiwag''
 
| about [[Sault Ste. Marie]]
 
|-
 
| [[St. Croix Chippewa Indians|Boarder-Sitters]]
 
| ''Biitan-akiing-enabijig''
 
| northern [[Wisconsin]]
 
|-
 
| [[Lake Superior Chippewa|Lake Superior Band]]
 
| ''Gichi-gamiwininiwag''
 
| south shore of [[Lake Superior]]
 
|-
 
| [[Mississippi River Band of Chippewa Indians|Mississippi River Band]]
 
| ''Gichi-ziibiwininiwag''
 
| upper [[Mississippi River]] in [[Minnesota]]
 
|-
 
| [[Couchiching First Nation|Rainy Lake Band]]
 
| ''Goojijiwininiwag''
 
| [[Rainy Lake]] and [[Rainy River|River]], about the northern boundary of [[Minnesota]]
 
|-
 
| [[St. Croix Chippewa Indians|Ricing-Rails]]
 
| ''Manoominikeshiinyag''
 
| along headwaters of [[St. Croix River (Wisconsin-Minnesota)|St. Croix River]] in [[Wisconsin]] and [[Minnesota]]
 
|-
 
| [[Pillager Band of Chippewa Indians|Pillagers]]
 
| ''Mekamaadwewininiwag''
 
| [[Leech Lake]], [[Minnesota]]
 
|-
 
| [[Mississaugas]]
 
| ''Misi-zaagiwininiwag''
 
| north of [[Lake Erie]]
 
|-
 
| [[Algonquin]]s ([[Nipissing First Nation|Nipissing]] )
 
| ''Odishkwaagamiig''
 
| [[Quebec]]-[[Ontario]] boarder, about [[Lake Nipissing]]
 
|-
 
| [[Dokis First Nation|Doki's Band]]
 
| ''N/A''
 
| Along [[French River (Ontario)|French River]] region in [[Ontario]], near [[Lake Nipissing]]
 
|-
 
| [[Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians|Ottawa Lake (Lac Courte Oreilles) Band]]
 
| ''Odaawaa-zaaga'iganiwininiwag''
 
| [[Lac Courte Oreilles]], [[Wisconsin]]
 
|-
 
| [[Bois Forte Band of Chippewa Indians|Bois Forte Band]]
 
| ''Zagaakwaandagowininiwag''
 
| north of [[Lake Superior]]
 
|-
 
| [[Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa|Torch (Flambeau) Band]]
 
| ''Waaswaaganiwininiwag''
 
| head of [[Wisconsin River]]
 
|-
 
| [[Wauzhushk Onigum First Nation|Muskrat Portage Band]]
 
| ''Wazhashk-Onigamininiwag''
 
| northwest side of [[Lake Superior]] at the Canadian border
 
|}
 
  
These 10 major divisions and other major groups that Warren did not record developed into these Ojibwa Bands and First Nations of today. Bands are listed under their respective tribes where possible.
+
Members of the Red Lake Band of Ojibwa in northern Minnesota are making efforts to live in  harmony with their land, restoring fisheries, and enhancing [[wetland]]s and other wildlife [[habitat]]s. Despite facing [[poverty]] and high levels of [[unemployment]] on their [[Indian reservation|reservation]], tribal members support these conservation efforts. Although their lifestyle has changed significantly, the traditional "ricing" practice is being restored in the belief that it helps both people and wildlife, bringing a greater balance to life. When gathering rice in the traditional way they knock some grains back into the lake to sustain future harvests, as well as leaving others on the plants as food for birds. A commercial [[wild rice]] farm now offers income and also the habitat needed for both waterfowl and shorebirds (Cubie 2007).
  
* [[Aamjiwnaang First Nation]]
+
== Notable Ojibwa ==
* [[Batchewana First Nation of Ojibways]] [http://www.batchewana.ca/]
+
Ojibwa people have achieved much in many walks of life—from the chiefs of old to more recent artists, scholars, sportsmen, and activists. The following are a few examples.
* [[Bay Mills Chippewa Community]]
+
*[[Dennis Banks]], a Native American leader, teacher, lecturer, activist and author, was born on Leech Lake Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota. In 1968 he co-founded the American Indian Movement (AIM), an activist group that works for Indian rights both on and off the reservations. In addition to protecting the traditional ways of Indian people, engaging in legal cases protecting treaty rights of Natives, such as hunting and fishing, trapping, and wild rice farming, the organization has a large number of urban Indian members who live and work in large cities and whose rights the organization also defends.
* [[Biinjitiwabik Zaaging Anishnabek First Nation]]
+
*[[James Bartleman]] grew up in the Muskoka town of Port Carling, a member of the Chippewas of Mnjikaning First Nation. A Canadian diplomat and author, he served as the 27th Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario from 2002 to 2007.
* [[Cat Lake First Nation]]
+
*[[Carl Beam]] (1943-2005), (born Carl Edward Migwans) made Canadian art history as the first artist of Native ancestry to have his work purchased by the National Gallery of Canada as Contemporary Art. His mother, Barbara Migwans was the Ojibwa daughter of Dominic Migwans who was then the Chief of the Ojibways of West Bay and his father, Edward Cooper, was an American soldier.
* [[Chapleau Ojibway First Nation]]
+
*[[Kechewaishke|Chief Buffalo]] (Ojibwe: Ke-che-waish-ke/Gichi-weshkiinh – "Great-renewer" or Peezhickee/Bizhiki – "Buffalo"; also French, Le Beouf) was an Ojibwa leader born at La Pointe in the Apostle Islands group of [[Lake Superior]], in what is now northern Wisconsin. Recognized as the principal chief of the Lake Superior Chippewa for nearly a half-century until his death in 1855, he led his nation into a [[treaty]] relationship with the United States Government. He was also instrumental in resisting the efforts of the United States to remove the Chippewa and in securing permanent reservations for his people near Lake Superior.
* [[Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation]]
+
* [[Hanging Cloud]] (Ojibwa name Ah-shah-way-gee-she-go-qua (''Aazhawigiizhigokwe'' in the contemporary spelling), meaning "Goes Across the Sky Woman") was an Ojibwa woman who was a full warrior (''ogichidaakwe'' in Ojibwe) among her people.
* [[Chippewas of Kettle and Stony Point]]
+
*[[Karen Louise Erdrich]], author of novels, poetry, and children's books, continued the Ojibwa tradition of self-expression in her writings.
* [[Chippewas of Rama Mnjikaning First Nation]]
+
*[[Winona LaDuke]], activist, environmentalist, economist, and writer, ran for election to the office of Vice President of the United States in 1996 and 2000 as the nominee of the [[United States Green Party]], on the ticket headed by [[Ralph Nader]].
* [[The Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation]]
+
*[[Ted Nolan]], born on the Garden River Ojibwa First Nation Reserve outside of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada served as Head [[Coach]] of the Buffalo Sabres and New York Islanders after retirement as a Canadian professional hockey Left Winger. He played three seasons in the National Hockey League for the Detroit Red Wings and Pittsburgh Penguins.  
* [[Chippewa of the Thames First Nation]]
+
*[[Yellow_Head_(person)|O-zaw-wen-dib]] or ''Ozaawindib,'' "Yellow Head" in English) was an Ojibwa warrior who lived in the early nineteenth century and was described as an ''egwakwe'' ("agokwa" in literature) or [[two-spirit]]—a man who dressed and acted as a woman.
* [[Chippewas of Saugeen Ojibway Territory]]
+
*[[Keewaydinoquay Peschel|Keewaydinoquay Pakawakuk Peschel]] was a scholar, [[ethnobotany|ethnobotanist]], herbalist, medicine woman, teacher, and author. She was an Anishinaabeg Elder of the Crane Clan, born in Michigan around 1919 and spent time on Garden Island, Michigan, a traditional Anishinaabeg homeland.
* [[Chippewa Cree]] Tribe of [[Rocky Boys Indian Reservation]]
+
*[[Keith Secola]], an award-winning figure in contemporary Native American music, an Ojibwa originally from Minnesota and graduated from the [[University of Minnesota]] with a degree in American Indian Studies.
* [[Curve Lake First Nation]]
+
*[[Gerald Vizenor]], an enrolled member of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, White Earth Reservation, one of the most prolific Native American writers with over 25 books to his name, he also taught for many years at the [[University of California]], Berkeley, where he was Director of Native American Studies.
* [[Cutler First Nation]]
 
* [[Dokis First Nation]]
 
* [[Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians]]
 
* [[Garden River First Nation]]
 
* [[Asubpeeschoseewagong|Grassy Narrows First Nation (Asabiinyashkosiwagong Nitam-Anishinaabeg)]]
 
* [[Islands in the Trent Waters]]
 
* [[Keeseekoowenin Ojibway First Nation]]
 
* [[Kinistin First Nation]]
 
* [[Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug]]
 
* [[Magnetawan First Nation]]
 
* [[Lac Des Mille Lacs First Nation]]
 
* [[Lac La Croix First Nation]]
 
* [[Lac Seul First Nation]]
 
* [[Lake Nipigon Ojibway First Nation]]
 
* [[Lake Superior Chippewa Tribe]]
 
** [[Bad River Chippewa Band]]
 
** [[Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa]]
 
** [[L'Anse Indian Reservation|Keweenaw Bay Indian Community]]
 
*** L'Anse Band of Chippewa Indians
 
*** Ontonagon Band of Chippewa Indians
 
** [[Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians]]
 
*** Bois Brule River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
 
*** Chippewa River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa
 
*** [[Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians]]
 
*** Removable [[St. Croix Chippewa Indians]] of Wisconsin
 
** [[Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake Superior Chippewa]]
 
** [[Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa]] [http://www.redcliff.org/rc.php?page=home.html]
 
** [[Sokaogon Chippewa Community]]
 
** [[St. Croix Chippewa Indians]] of Wisconsin
 
* [[Minnesota Chippewa Tribe]]
 
** [[Bois Forte Band of Chippewa Indians]]
 
*** [[Bois Forte Band of Chippewa Indians]]
 
*** [[Wauzhushk Onigum First Nation|Muskrat Portage Band of Chippewa Indians]]
 
** [[Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa]]
 
** [[Grand Portage Band of Chippewa]]
 
** [[Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe]]
 
*** Cass Lake Band of Chippewa
 
*** Lake Winnibigoshish Band of Chippewa
 
*** Leech Lake Band of Pillagers
 
*** Removable [[Lake Superior Chippewa Tribe|Lake Superior Bands of Chippewa]] of the Chippewa Reservation
 
*** White Oak Point Band of [[Mississippi Chippewa]]
 
** [[Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe]]
 
*** [[Mille Lacs Indians]]
 
*** [[Sandy Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa]]
 
*** [[Rice Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa]]
 
*** St. Croix Band of Chippewa Indians of Minnesota
 
**** Kettle River Band of Chippewa Indians
 
**** Snake and Knife Rivers Band of Chippewa Indians
 
** [[White Earth Band of Chippewa]]
 
*** Gull Lake Band of [[Mississippi Chippewa]]
 
*** Otter Tail Band of Pillagers
 
*** Rabbit Lake Band of [[Mississippi Chippewa]]
 
*** Removable [[Mille Lacs Indians]]
 
*** Removable [[Sandy Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa]]
 
*** [[Rice Lake Band of Mississippi Chippewa]]
 
* [[Ojibways of the Pic River First Nation]]
 
* [[Pembina Band of Chippewa Indians]] (Historical)
 
* [[Pikangikum First Nation]]
 
* [[Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians]]
 
** Lac des Bois Band of Chippewa Indians
 
* [[Sandy Bay Ojibway First Nation]]
 
* [[Sagamok Anishnawbek First Nation]]
 
* [[Saginaw Chippewa Tribal Council]]
 
*[[Sagkeeng]] First Nation
 
* [[Sault Tribe of Chippewa Indians]]
 
* [[Saulteau First Nation]]
 
* [[Shawanaga First Nation]]
 
* [http://www.seed.mb.ca Southeast Tribal Council]
 
** Berens River First Nation
 
** [[Bloodvein First Nation]]
 
** Brokenhead First Nation
 
** Buffalo Point First Nation
 
** Hollow Water First Nation
 
** Black River First Nation
 
** Little Grand Rapids First Nation
 
** Pauingassi First Nation
 
** [[Poplar River First Nation]]
 
* [[Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians]]
 
* [[Wabasseemoong Independent Nation]]
 
* [[Wabauskang First Nation]]
 
* [[Wabun Tribal Council]] [http://www.wabun.on.ca/]
 
** Beaverhouse First Nation
 
** Brunswick House First Nation
 
** Chapleau Ojibwe First Nation
 
** Matachewan  First Nation
 
** Mattagami First Nation
 
** Wahgoshig First Nation
 
* [[Wabigoon Lake Ojibway Nation]]
 
* [[Wahnapitae First Nation]]
 
* [[Washagamis Bay First Nation]]
 
* [[Wauzhushk Onigum First Nation]]
 
* [[Whitefish Bay First Nation]]
 
* [[Whitefish Lake First Nation]]
 
* [[Whitefish River First Nation]]
 
* [[Whitesand First Nation]]
 
* [[Wikwemikong Unceded First Nation]]
 
* [[Windigo First Nations Council]] [http://www.windigo.on.ca/]
 
** Bearskin Lake First Nation
 
** Cat Lake First Nation
 
** Koocheching First Nation
 
** North Caribou Lake First Nation
 
** Sachigo Lake First Nation
 
** Slate Falls First Nation
 
** Whitewater Lake First Nation
 
* [[Whitefish Lake First Nation]]
 
* [[Yellow Quill First Nation]]
 
  
== Other Tribes known by their Ojibwa/Ottawa Names ==
+
==Gallery==
{| class="wikitable"
+
<gallery>
! Known<br/>Name
+
Image:A-na-cam-e-gish-ca.jpg|[[A-na-cam-e-gish-ca]] (''Aanakamigishkaa''/ "[Traces of] Foot Prints [upon the Ground]"), Ojibwa chief, painted by [[Charles Bird King]]
! Ojibwa<br/>Name
+
Image:Caa-tou-see.jpg|''Caa-tou-see,'' an Ojibwa, painted by Charles Bird King
! Ojibwa<br/>Meaning
+
Image:Hangingcloud.jpg|[[Hanging Cloud]], a female Ojibwa warrior
! Own<br/>Name
+
Image:Jack-O-Pa.jpg|[[Jack-O-Pa]] (''Shák'pí''/"Six"), an Ojibwa/Dakota chief, painted by Charles Bird King
|-
+
Image:Eastman_Johnson_-_Kay_be_sen_day_way_We_Win_-_ejb_-_fig_101_-_pg_225.jpg|''Kay be sen day way We Win,'' by [[Eastman Johnson]], 1857
| [[Quapaw|Arkansas]]
+
Image:George Catlin 003.jpg|Kei-a-gis-gis, a Plains Ojibwa woman, painted by [[George Catlin]]
| Aakaanzhish
+
Image:Leech Lake Chippewa delegation to Washington 1899.png|Leech Lake Ojibwa delegation to Washington, 1899
| Damn little Kansas
+
Image:23882 Ojibwe Woman1.jpg|[[Milwaukee]] Ojibwa woman and baby, courtesy of the Wisconsin Historical Society
| Quapaw
+
Image:Ojibwa Chief.gif|[[Ne-bah-quah-om]], Ojibwa chief
|-
+
Image:One-Called-From-A-Distance Chippewa.jpg|"One Called From A Distance" ''(Midwewinind)'' of the [[White Earth Band of Chippewa|White Earth Band]], 1894.
| [[Assiniboine]]
+
Image:PeeCheKir.jpg|[[Pee-Che-Kir]], Ojibwa chief, painted by [[Thomas Loraine McKenney]], 1843
| Asiniibwaan
+
Image:Rocky Boy Chippewa chief.jpg|Ojibwa chief [[Rocky Boy]]
| Stoney 'Asp' (i.e. the Sioux)
 
| Nakota
 
|-
 
| [[Blackfoot]]
 
| Makadewanazid
 
| Black-foot
 
| Siksikawa
 
|-
 
| [[Chipewyan]]
 
| Ojiibwayaan
 
| Pointed Skin
 
| Dënesųłiné
 
|-
 
| [[Shawnee|Chowanoc]]
 
| Zhaawanoog
 
| Southerners
 
| Shawnee
 
|-
 
| [[Eskimo]]
 
| Ashki-amaw
 
| Eats It Raw
 
| Inuit
 
|-
 
| [[Flathead Indians|Flathead]]
 
| Nebagindibe
 
| Flat-head
 
| Salish
 
|-
 
| [[Kaw (tribe)|Kansas]]
 
| Aakaans
 
| [Lives at the] Little Hell-hole
 
| Kaw
 
|-
 
| [[Kaskaskia]]
 
| Gaaskaaskeyaa
 
| Hide-scraper
 
|
 
|-
 
| [[Kickapoo]]
 
| Giiwigaabaw
 
| Stands here-and-there
 
|
 
|-
 
| [[Menominee]]
 
| Omanoominii
 
| Wild Rice People
 
| Omāēqnomenew
 
|-
 
| [[Miami tribe|Miami]]
 
| Omaamii
 
| Downstream people
 
| Myaamia
 
|-
 
| [[Mi'kmaq|Micmac]]
 
| Miigimaa
 
| Allied-Brothers
 
| Mi'kmaq
 
|-
 
| Moingwena
 
| Moowiingwenaa
 
| Have a Filthy Face
 
|
 
|-
 
| [[Ottawa (tribe)|Ottawa]]
 
| Odaawaa
 
| Trader
 
| Odawa
 
|-
 
| [[Potawatomi]]
 
| Boodewaadamii
 
| Fire Keeper
 
| Bodéwadmi
 
|-
 
| [[Sac (people)|Sauk/Sac]]
 
| Ozaagii
 
| [Lives at the] Outlet
 
| Asakiwaki
 
|-
 
| [[Lakota people|Sioux]]
 
| Naadawensiw
 
| Little like the 'Adders' (i.e. the Iroquois)
 
| [[Iowa tribe|Aioe]]-Dakota-Lakota-Nakota
 
|-
 
| [[Shoshone|Snake]]
 
| Ginebig
 
| Snake
 
| Shoshoni
 
|-
 
| [[Ho-Chunk|Winnebago]]
 
| Wiinibiigoo
 
| [Lives at the] Murky Waters
 
| Ho-čąk
 
|}
 
  
== Ojibwa Treaties ==
+
</gallery>
===Treaties with France===
 
* [[Great Peace of Montreal|La Grande Paix de Montréal]] (1701)
 
===Treaties with Great Britain===
 
* Treaty of Fort Niagara (1764)
 
* Treaty of Fort Niagara (1781)
 
* Indian Officers' Land Treaty (1783)
 
* The Crawford Purchases (1783)
 
* Between the Lakes Purchase (1784)
 
* The McKee Purchase (1790)
 
* Between the Lakes Purchase (1792)
 
* Chenail Ecarte (Sombra Township) Purchase (1796)
 
* London Township Purchase (1796)
 
* Land for Joseph Brant (1797)
 
* Penetanguishene Harbour (1798)
 
* St. Joseph Island (1798)
 
* Toronto Purchase (1805)
 
* Head-of-the-Lake Purchase (1806)
 
* Lake Simcoe Land (1815)
 
* Lake Simcoe-Nottawasaga Purchase (1818)
 
* Ajetance Purchase (1818)
 
* Rice Lake Purchase (1818)
 
* The Rideau Purchase (1819)
 
* Long Woods Purchase (1822)
 
* Huron Tract Purchase (1827)
 
* Saugeen Tract Agreement (1836)
 
* Manitoulin Agreement (1836)
 
* The [[Robinson Treaty|Robinson Treaties]]
 
** [[Robinson Treaty#Lake Superior|Ojibewa Indians Of Lake Superior]] (1850)
 
** [[Robinson Treaty#Lake Huron|Ojibewa Indians Of Lake Huron]] (1850)<!--
 
** [[Robinson Treaty#Lake Huron|Ojibewa Indians Of Lake Huron]] (1854)—>
 
* Manitoulin Island Treaty (1862)
 
===Treaties with the United States===
 
* [[Treaty of Fort McIntosh]] (1785)
 
* [[Treaty of Fort Harmar]] (1789)
 
* [[Treaty of Greenville]] (1795)
 
* [[Fort Industry]] (1805)
 
* [[Treaty of Detroit]] (1807)
 
* [[Treaty of Brownstown]] (1808)
 
* [[Treaty of Spring Wells]] (1815)
 
* [[Treaty of St. Louis]] (1816) - Ottawa, Ojibwa, and Potawatomi
 
* [[Treaty of Miami Rapids]] (1817)
 
* [[St. Mary's Treaty]] (1818)
 
* [[Treaty of Saginaw]] (1819)
 
* [[Treaty of Saúlt Ste. Marie]] (1820)
 
* [[Treaty of L'Arbre Croche and Michilimackinac]] (1820)
 
* [[Treaty of Chicago]] (1821)
 
* [[Treaty of Prairie du Chien#1825 Treaty of Prairie du Chien|Treaty of Prairie du Chien]] (1825)
 
* [[Treaty of Fond du Lac]] (1826)
 
* [[Treaty of Butte des Morts]] (1827)
 
* [[Treaty of Green Bay]] (1828)
 
* [[Treaty of Prairie du Chien#1829 Treaty of Prairie du Chien|Treaty of Prairie du Chien]] (1829)
 
* [[Treaty of Chicago]] (1833)
 
* [[Treaty of Washington]] (1836) - Ottawa & Chippewa
 
* [[Treaty of Washington]] (1836) - Swan Creek & Black River Bands
 
* [[Treaty of Detroit]] (1837)
 
* [[Treaty of St. Peters]] (1837) - White Pine Treaty
 
* [[Treaty of Flint River]] (1837)
 
* Saganaw Treaties
 
** [[Treaty of Saganaw]] (1838)
 
** [[Treaty of Saganaw Supplimental|Supplimental Treaty]] (1839)
 
* [[Treaty of La Pointe#1842 Treaty of La Pointe|Treaty of La Pointe]] (1842) - Copper Treaty
 
* [[Treaty of Potawatomi Creek]] (1846)
 
* [[Treaty of Fond du Lac]] (1847)
 
* [[Treaty of Leech Lake]] (1847)
 
* [[Treaty of La Pointe#1854 Treaty of La Pointe|Treaty of La Pointe]] (1854)
 
* [[Treaty of Washington (1855)]]
 
* [[Treaty of Detroit#With the Ottawa & Chippewa|Treaty of Detroit]] (1855) - Ottawa & Chippewa
 
* [[Treaty of Detroit#With the Sault Ste. Marie Band|Treaty of Detroit]] (1855) - Sault Ste. Marie Band
 
* [[Treaty of Detroit#With the Swan Creek & Black River Bands|Treaty of Detroit]] (1855) - Swan Creek & Black River Bands
 
* [[Treaty of Sac and Fox Agency]] (1859)
 
* [[Treaty of Washington (1863)]]
 
* [[Treaty of Old Crossing (1863)]]
 
* [[Treaty of Old Crossing (1864)]]
 
* [[Treaty of Washington (1864)]]
 
* [[Treaty of Isabella Reservation (1864)]]
 
* [[Treaty of Washington (1866)]]
 
* [[Treaty of Washington (1867)]]
 
  
===Treaties with Canada===
+
==References==
* [[Treaty 1|Treaty No. 1]] (1871) - Stone Fort Treaty
+
* Andrews, Terri J. 1997. [http://www.angelfire.com/biz2/turquoisebutterfly/dreaming.html Living By The Dream]. The Turquoise Butterfly Press. Retrieved October 28, 2008.
* [[Treaty 2|Treaty No. 2]] (1871)
+
* Catlin, George. [1844] 1995. ''Letters and Notes on the North American Indians: Two Volumes in One.'' World Publications. ISBN 1572151951
* [[Treaty 3|Treaty No. 3]] (1873) - [[Northwest Angle]] Treaty
+
* Cubie, Doreen. 2007. Restoring a Lost Legacy. ''National Wildlife'' 45(4): 39-45.
* [[Treaty 4|Treaty No. 4]] (1874) - Qu'Appelle Treaty
+
* Densmore, Frances. [1929, 1979] 2008. ''Chippewa Customs.'' reprint ed. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1436683241
* [[Treaty 5|Treaty No. 5]] (1875)
+
* Densmore, Frances. [1913] 2006. ''Chippewa Music.'' reprint ed. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1425499563
* [[Treaty 6|Treaty No. 6]] (1876)
+
* Erdrich, Louise. 2003. ''Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country.'' National Geographic. ISBN 0792257197
* [[Treaty 8|Treaty No. 8]] (1899)
+
* Hlady, Walter M. 1961. [http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/indianmigrations.shtml Indian Migrations in Manitoba and the West]. ''Manitoba Historical Society Transactions'', Series 3. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
* [[Treaty 9|Treaty No. 9]] (1905-1906) - [[James Bay]] Treaty
+
* Hodge, Frederick Webb. [1912] 2003. [http://www.prairienet.org/prairienations/chippewa.htm Chippewa]. ''Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico.'' ISBN 1582187487. Digital Scanning Inc. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
* [[Treaty 5|Treaty No. 5, Adhesions]] (1908-1910)
+
* Hoffman, Walter James. 2005. ''The Mide'wiwin: Grand Medicine Society of the Ojibway.'' Honolulu, HI: University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410222969
* The Williams Treaties (1923)
+
* Johnston, Basil. [1987] 1990. ''Ojibway Ceremonies.'' Lincoln, NE: Bison Books. ISBN 0803275730
** [[Williams Treaty#Chippewa|The Chippewa Indians]]
+
* Johnston, Basil. [1976] 1990.''Ojibway Heritage.'' Lincoln, NE: Bison Books. ISBN 0803275722
** [[Williams Treaty#Mississauga|The Mississauga Indians]]
+
* Johnston, Basil. [1995] 2001. ''The Manitous: The Spiritual World of the Ojibway.'' St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 0873514114
* [[Treaty 9|Treaty No. 9, Adhesions]] (1929-1930)
+
* Johnston, Basil H. 2007. ''Anishinaubae Thesaurus''. Michigan State University Press. ISBN 978-0870137532
 +
* Jones, William. [1917] 2007. [http://www.archive.org/details/ojibwatextscoll07jonerich ''Ojibwa Texts'']. Retrieved October 30, 2008. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0548575925
 +
* Pettipas, Katherine. 1994. ''Severing the Ties that Bind: Government Repression of Indigenous Religious Ceremonies on the Prairies.'' Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press. ISBN 0887556388
 +
* Roy, Loriene. 2008. [http://www.everyculture.com/multi/Le-Pa/Ojibwa.html Ojibwa]. Multicultural America. Retrieved October 29, 2008.
 +
* Schneider, Karoline. 2003. [http://home.hetnet.nl/~cvkolmes/ojibwe/NASojib.htm The Culture and Language of the Minnesota Ojibwe: An Introduction]. Kee's Ojibwe page. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
 +
* Sultzman, Lee. 2000. [http://www.tolatsga.org/ojib.html Ojibwe History]. First Nations Histories. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
 +
* Tanner, John. [1830] 2007. ''A Narrative Of The Captivity And Adventures Of John Tanner, U. S. Interpreter At The Saut De Ste. Marie During Thirty Years Residence Among The Indians In The Interior Of North America.'' reprint ed. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0548213131
 +
* Thwaites, Reuben Gold, ed. [1640] 1898. [http://puffin.creighton.edu/jesuit/relations/relations_18.html Hurons and Québec]. ''The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents: Travels and Explorations of the Jesuit Missionaries in New France 1610—1791 Vol. XVIII.'' Cleveland, OH: The Burrows Brothers. Computerized transcription by Tomasz Mentrak. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
 +
* Vizenor, Gerald. 1984. ''The People Named the Chippewa: Narrative Histories.'' Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0816613052
 +
* Waldman, Carl. 2006. ''Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes.'' New York: Checkmark Books. ISBN 978-0816062744.
 +
* Warren, William W. [1851] 1984. ''History of the Ojibway People.'' St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 087351162X
  
==Notes==
+
==External links==
<references />
+
All links retrieved November 17, 2022.
 
+
* [http://www.freelang.net/dictionary/ojibwe.html Freelang Ojibwe-English dictionary and English-Ojibwe dictionary]
 
+
* [http://www.ubu.com/ethno/visuals/chip.html Ojibwe Song Pictures], recorded by Frances Desmore circa 1907.
== References ==
 
* Danziger, E.J., Jr. 1978. ''The Chippewa of Lake Superior''. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0806114878.
 
* Densmore, F. 1979. ''Chippewa customs''. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 0873511425.
 
* Grim, J.A. 1983. ''The shaman: Patterns of religious healing among the Ojibway Indians''. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0806118091.
 
* Gross, L.W. 2002. The comic vision of Anishinaabe culture and religion. ''American Indian Quarterly''. 26:436-459.
 
* Johnston, B. 1976. ''Ojibway heritage''. Toronto, CA: McClelland and Stewart. ISBN 0771044402.
 
* Nichols, J.D., & E. Nyholm. 1995. ''A concise dictionary of Minnesota Ojibwe''. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0816624275.
 
* Vizenor, G. 1972. ''The everlasting sky: New voices from the people named the Chippewa''. New York, NY: Crowell-Collier Press.
 
* Vizenor, G. 1981. ''Summer in the spring: Ojibwe lyric poems and tribal stories''. Minneapolis, MN: The Nodin Press. ISBN 093171415X.
 
* Vizenor, G. 1984. ''The people named the Chippewa: Narrative histories''. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0816613052.
 
* Wub-e-ke-niew. 1995. ''We have the right to exist: A translation of aboriginal indigenous thought''. New York, NY: Black Thistle Press. ISBN 0962818143.
 
* Warren, William W. 1984. ''History of the Ojibway People''. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 087351162X.
 
* Hickerson, H. 1970. ''The Chippewa and Their Neighbors''. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 0030844282.
 
* Landes, R. 1969. ''Ojibwa Sociology''. New York, NY: AMS Press.
 
* Landes, R. 1971. ''Ojibwa Woman''. New York, NY: AMS Press.
 
* Symington, F. 1969. ''The Canadian Indian''. Toronto, CA: McClelland and Stewart. Illustrated Books Division.
 
* Brill, Charles. 1992. ''Red Lake Nation: Portraits of Ojibway Life''. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-1906-9.
 
 
 
== External links ==
 
* [http://www.fw.umn.edu/Indigenous/TREATIES.HTM Chippewa treaties online and maps of the tribal areas discussed]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.glifwc.org/ Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.treatyland.com/ Midwest Treaty Network]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.tolatsga.org/ojib.html Ojibwe culture and history], a lengthy and detailed discussion. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.freelang.net/dictionary/ojibwe.html Freelang Ojibwe Dictionary], an extensive electronic Ojibwe-English/English-Ojibwe language dictionary. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/5579/ojibwa.html Kevin L. Callahan's ''An Introduction to Ojibway Culture and History'']. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.ubu.com/ethno/visuals/chip.html Ojibwe Song Pictures], recorded by Frances Desmore. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.prairienet.org/prairienations/chippewa.htm Digital recreation of the 'Chippewa' entry] from ''Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico'', edited by Frederick Webb Hodge. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/indianmigrations.shtml Ojibwa migration through Manitoba]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://nativedrums.ca/index.php/video?tp=a&bg=1&ln=e video: The Making of an Ojibwe Hand Drum]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/wm/63.1/bohaker.html Nindoodemag: The Significance of Algonquian Kinship Networks in the Eastern Great Lakes Region, 1600–1701]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.glifwc.org/pub/fall99/clansystem.htm Ojibwe clan systems: A cultural connection to the natural world]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.doi.gov/iacb/act.html The Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.theosociety.org/pasadena/sunrise/46-96-7/ms-lakot.htm Legend of the Dreamcatcher]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.the7thfire.com/history.htm History of Dream Catchers]. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://www.nwf.org/nationalwildlife/article.cfm?issueID=115&articleID=1469 Restoring a Lost Legacy]. National Wildlife. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4370617.stm Teenage gunman kills nine in US] BBC. Retrieved November 7, 2007.
 
 
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Anthropology]]
 
[[Category:Ethnic group]]
 
  
{{credits|Ojibwa|145139126|Dreamcatcher|156381245|}}
+
{{Credits|Ojibwa|248109913|Anishinaabe_traditional_beliefs|239357254|Saulteaux|243211820|Sun_Dance|249764741|Jingle_dress|243941536}}

Latest revision as of 10:28, 11 March 2023


Ojibwa
Anishinabe.svg
Crest of the Ojibwa people
Total population
175,000
Regions with significant populations
United States, Canada
Languages
English, Ojibwe
Religions
Catholicism, Methodism, Midewiwin
Related ethnic groups
Ottawa, Potawatomi and other Algonquian peoples

The Ojibwa or Chippewa (also Ojibwe, Ojibway, Chippeway) is one of the largest groups of Native Americans-First Nations in North America. They are divided between the United States and Canada. Because they were formerly located mainly around Sault Ste. Marie, at the outlet of Lake Superior, the French referred to them as Saulteurs. Ojibwa who subsequently moved to the prairie provinces of Canada have retained the name Saulteaux. Ojibwa who were originally located about the Mississagi River and made their way to southern Ontario are known as the Mississaugas.

They were fearless warriors and, with the use of gun technology from the British, they were able to defeat and push back the Sioux and Fox tribes to become the unchallenged inhabitants of vast areas of the northern plains around the Great Lakes.

They are known for their birch bark canoes, sacred birch bark scrolls, the use of cowrie shells, wild rice, copper points. Their Midewiwin Society is well respected as the keeper of detailed and complex scrolls of events, history, songs, maps, memories, stories, geometry, and mathematics. The Ojibwa Nation was the first to set the agenda for signing more detailed treaties with Canada's leaders before many settlers were allowed too far west. They also signed numerous treaties with the United States, seeking to keep at least portions of their ancestral lands to be designated as their reservations and avoiding the tragic relocations of many other tribes.

Today, as a major component group of the Anishinaabe peoples—which includes the Algonquin, Nipissing, Oji-Cree, Odawa and the Potawatomi—the Ojibwa peoples number over 100,000 in the U.S., living in an area stretching across the north from Michigan to Montana. Another 76,000, in 125 bands, live in Canada, stretching from western Québec to eastern British Columbia. Despite facing poverty and high levels of unemployment, many contemporary Ojibwa continue to follow traditional ways, both practical and spiritual. They are active in resource management, seeking ways to live in harmony with their environment.

Names

The name Ojibwe (plural: Ojibweg) is commonly anglicized as "Ojibwa." The name "Chippewa" is an anglicized corruption of "Ojibwa." Although many variations exist in literature, "Chippewa" is more common in the United States and "Ojibwa" predominates in Canada, but both terms do exist in both countries. The exact meaning of the name "Ojibwe" is not known; the most common explanations on the name derivations are:

  • from ojiibwabwe (/o/ + /jiibw/ + /abwe/), meaning "those who cook\roast until it puckers," referring to their fire-curing of moccasin seams to make them water-proof (Roy 2008), though some sources instead say this was a method of torture which the Ojibwa implemented upon their enemies (Warren 1984).
  • from ozhibii'iwe (/o/ + /zhibii'/ + /iwe/), meaning "those who keep records [of a Vision]," referring to their form of pictorial writing, and pictographs used in Midewiwin rites (Erdrich 2003).
  • from ojiibwe (/o/ + /jiib/ + /we/), meaning "those who speak-stiffly"\"those who stammer," referring to how the Ojibwa sounded to the Cree (Johnston 2007).

The Saulteaux (also Salteaux pronounced [ˈsoʊtoʊ]) are a First Nation in Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia, Canada, and a branch of the Ojibwa. Saulteaux is a French language term meaning "people of the rapids," referring to their former location about Sault Ste. Marie.

The Ojibwa/Chippewa are part of the Anishinaabe peoples, together with the Odawa and Algonkin peoples. Anishnaabeg (plural form) means "First- or Original-Peoples" or it may refer to "the good humans," or good people, that are on the right road/path given to them by the Creator or gitchi-manitou (Anishinaabeg term for God). In many Ojibwa communities throughout Canada and the U. S., the more generalized name Anishinaabe(-g) is becoming more commonly used as a self-description.

Language

The Ojibwe language is known as Anishinaabemowin or Ojibwemowin, and is still widely spoken. It belongs to the Algonquian linguistic group, and is descended from Proto-Algonquian. Its sister languages include Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Cree, Fox, Menominee, Potawatomi, and Shawnee. Anishinaabemowin is frequently referred to as a "Central Algonquian" language; however, Central Algonquian is an areal grouping rather than a genetic one. Ojibwemowin is the fourth most spoken Native language in North America (after Navajo, Cree, and Inuktitut). Many decades of fur trading with the French established the language as one of the key trade languages of the Great Lakes and the northern Great Plains.

The Ojibwa presence was made highly visible among non-Native Americans and around the world by the popularity of the epic poem The Song of Hiawatha, written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1855. The epic contains many toponyms that originate from Ojibwa words.

History

Pre-contact

According to the oral history of the Anishinaabeg and from their recordings in birch bark scrolls, the Ojibwa came from the eastern areas of North America, or Turtle Island (the English language translation of many Native American tribes' name for the continent of North America), and from along the east coast. They traded widely across the continent for thousands of years and knew of the canoe routes west and a land route to the West Coast.

When the Anishinaabeg were living on the shores of the "Great Salt Water" (presumably the Atlantic Ocean near the Gulf of St. Lawrence). They were instructed by seven prophets to follow a sacred miigis shell, a whiteshell (cowry) toward the west, until they reached a place where food grew upon the water. They began their migration some time around 950 C.E., stopping at various points along the way, most significantly at Baawitigong, Sault Ste. Marie, where they stayed for a long time, and where two subgroups decided to stay (these became the Potawatomi and Ottawa). Eventually they arrived at the wild rice lands of Minnesota and Wisconsin (wild rice being the food that grew upon the water) and made Mooningwanekaaning minis (Madeline Island: "Island of the yellow-shafted flicker") their new capital. In total, the migration took around five centuries.

Following the migration there was a cultural divergence separating the Potawatomi from the Ojibwa and Ottawa. Particularly, the Potawatomi did not adopt the agricultural innovations discovered or adopted by the Ojibwa, such as the Three Sisters crop complex, copper tools, conjugal collaborative farming, and the use of canoes in rice harvesting (Waldman 2006). Also, the Potawatomi divided labor according to gender, much more than did the Ojibwa and Ottawa.

Post-contact with Europeans

The first historical mention of the Ojibwa occurs in the Jesuit Relation of 1640 under the name Baouichigouian, known by the French as Sauteurs because of their residence about the Sault de Ste. Marie (Thwaites 1640). In 1642, Raymbaut and Jogues found them at war with a people to their west, probably the Sioux (Hodge 1910).

The Ojibwa were described as "equaling in physical appearance the best formed of the Northwest Indians, with the possible exception of the Foxes" and exhibited great determination and courage in their conflicts with their enemies (Hodge 1910). Yet they were friendly toward the French, and although they encountered missionaries Christianity took little hold, due to the power of their indigenous beliefs and their shamans.

Through their friendship with the French traders, they were able to obtain guns and thus successfully end their wars with the Sioux and Fox on their west and south. The Sioux were driven out from the Upper Mississippi region, and the Fox were forced down from northern Wisconsin and compelled to ally with the Sauk.

By the end of the eighteenth century, the Ojibwa were the nearly unchallenged owners of almost all of present-day Michigan, northern Wisconsin, and Minnesota, including most of the Red River area, together with the entire northern shores of Lakes Huron and Superior on the Canadian side and extending westward to the Turtle Mountains of North Dakota, where they became known as the Plains Ojibwa or Saulteaux.

The Ojibwa together with the Ottawa and Potawatomi peoples formed the Council of Three Fires which fought with the Iroquois Confederacy and the Sioux. The Ojibwa expanded eastward, taking over the lands alongside the eastern shores of Lake Huron and Georgian Bay. The Ojibwa allied with the French in the French and Indian War, and with the British in the War of 1812.

In the U.S., the government attempted to remove all the Ojibwa to Minnesota west of Mississippi River, culminating in the Sandy Lake Tragedy and several hundred deaths. Through the efforts of Chief Buffalo and popular opinion against Ojibwa removal, the bands east of the Mississippi were allowed to return to permanent reservations on ceded territory. A few families were removed to Kansas as part of the Potawatomi removal.

In British North America, the cession of land by treaty or purchase was governed by the Royal Proclamation of 1763, and subsequently most of the land in Upper Canada was ceded to Great Britain. Even with the Jay Treaty signed between the Great Britain and the United States, the newly formed United States did not fully uphold the treaty, causing illegal immigration into Ojibwa and other Native American lands, which culminated in the Northwest Indian War. Subsequently, much of the lands in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, parts of Illinois and Wisconsin, and northern Minnesota and North Dakota were ceded to the United States. However, provisions were made in many of the land cession treaties to allow for continued hunting, fishing, and gathering of natural resources by the Ojibwa even after the land sales.

The Saulteaux were originally settled around Lake Superior and Lake Winnipeg, principally in the Sault Ste. Marie and northern Michigan areas. White Canadians and Americans gradually pushed the tribe westwards to Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, with one community in British Columbia. Today most of them live in the Interlake, southern part of Manitoba, and in Saskatchewan; because they lived on land ill-suited for European crops, they were able to keep much of their land.

In northwestern Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, the Ojibwa signed the numbered treaties in the nineteenth century. British Columbia had no signed treaties until the late twentieth century. These numbered treaties were some of the most detailed treaties signed for their time.

Often, earlier treaties were known as "Peace and Friendship Treaties" to establish community bonds between the Ojibwa and the European settlers. These earlier treaties established the groundwork for cooperative resource sharing between the Ojibwa and the settlers. However, later treaties involving land cessions were seen as territorial advantages for both the United States and Canada, but the land cession terms were often not fully understood by the Ojibwa because of the cultural differences in understanding of the land. For the governments of the US and Canada, land was considered a commodity of value that could be freely bought, owned and sold. For the Ojibwa, land was considered a fully-shared resource, along with air, water and sunlight; the concept of land sales or exclusive ownership of land was foreign to the Ojibwa at the time of the treaty councils. Consequently, legal arguments in treaty-rights and treaty interpretations continue to bring to light the differences in cultural understanding of these treaty terms.

Culture

Most Ojibwa were of the Woodlands culture, hunter-gatherers who harvested wild rice and maple sugar. They had no salt and so used maple syrup as a preservative to preserve their food (Sultzman 2000). However, the Ojibwa lived across a wide area and adapted to their local environments.

The eastern Ojibwa lived a sedentary lifestyle, engaging in fishing, hunting, the farming of maize and squash, and the harvesting of Manoomin (wild rice). The Plains Ojibwa farmed little and were mainly hunters and fishers, adopting the culture of the Plains Indians, hunting buffalo. A third group were known as the "Bungee," a transitional culture between the eastern Woodlands and the western Plains culture.

Details of Ojibwe Wigwam at Grand Portage by Eastman Johnson

The typical Ojibwa dwelling was the wiigiwaam (wigwam), built either as a waaginogaan (domed-lodge) or as a nasawa'ogaan (pointed-lodge), made of birch bark, juniper bark and willow saplings.

They also developed a form of pictorial writing used in religious rites of the Midewiwin and recorded on birch bark scrolls and sometimes on rock. The many complex pictures on the sacred scrolls communicate historical, geometrical, and mathematical knowledge. Ceremonies also used the miigis shell (cowry shell), which is naturally found in far away coastal areas; this fact suggests that there was a vast trade network across the continent at some time. The use and trade of copper across the continent is also proof of a very large area of trading that took place thousands of years ago, as far back as the Hopewell culture. Certain types of rock used for spear and arrow heads were also traded over large distances. The use of petroforms, petroglyphs, and pictographs was common throughout their traditional territories. Petroforms and medicine wheels were a way to teach the important concepts of four directions, astronomical observations about the seasons, and as a memorizing tool for certain stories and beliefs.

The Ojibwa would bury their dead in a burial mound; many erect a jiibegamig or a "spirit-house" over each mound. Instead of a headstone with the deceased's name inscribed upon it, a traditional burial mound would typically have a wooden marker, inscribed with the deceased's doodem.

The Ojibwa viewed the world in two types: animate and inanimate, rather than male and female genders. As an animate a person could serve the society as a male-role or a female-role. John Tanner, who spent 30 years living as an Ojibwa after having been kidnapped, documented in his Narrative that Ojibwa peoples do not fall into the European ideas of gender and its gender-roles, having people who fulfill mixed gender roles, two-spirits or egwakwe (Anglicised to "agokwa"). A well-known egwakwe warrior and guide in Minnesota history was Ozaawindib. Tanner described Ozaawindib as "This man was one of those who make themselves women, and are called women by the Indians" (Tanner 2007).

Clan and kinship systems

The Ojibwa people were divided into a number of odoodeman (clans; singular: odoodem) named primarily for animal totems (doodem). Five original totems were Wawaazisii (Bullhead), Baswenaazhi (Crane), Aan'aawenh (Pintail Duck), Nooke (Bear) and Moozwaanowe ("Little" Moose-tail). The clans had distinct responsibilities that worked together to care for the people, such as chieftainship, a type of police, teachers, spiritual guides, and so forth (Schneider 2003). Traditionally, each band had a self-regulating council consisting of leaders of the communities' clans, with the band often identified by the principle doodem.

Ojibwa understanding of kinship is complex, and includes not only the immediate family but also the extended family. It is considered a modified bifurcate merging kinship system. As with any bifurcate merging kinship system, siblings generally share the same term with parallel-cousins, because they are all part of the same clan. Complexity wanes further from the speaker's immediate generation, but some complexity is retained with female relatives. For example, ninooshenh is "my mother's sister" or "my father's sister-in-law"—my parallel-aunt—and also "my parent's female cross-cousin." Great-grandparents and older generations, as well as great-grandchildren and younger generations are collectively called aanikoobijigan. This system of kinship speaks of the nature of the Anishinaabe's philosophy and lifestyle, that is of interconnectedness and balance between all living generations and all generations of the past and of the future.

Spiritual beliefs - Midewiwin

Pictographs of a mishibizhiw ("underwater panther") as well as two snakes and a canoe, attributed to the Ojibwa. From Lake Superior Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada.

Before contact with Europeans, Ojibwa religion had little formal ceremony. They relied on shamans for healing by use of medicinal herbs. Contact with Europeans exposed them not just to a different culture but to new diseases against which they had little or no defense. Efforts to deal with sickness evolved into the complex Midewiwin Grand Medicine Society, a secret society whose qualified members performed elaborate ceremonies (Sultzman 2000).

The Ojibwa have a number of spiritual beliefs passed down by oral tradition under the Midewiwin teachings. These include a creation myth and a recounting of the origins of ceremonies and rituals. Spiritual beliefs and rituals were very important to the Ojibwa because spirits guided them through life. Birch bark scrolls and petroforms were used to pass along knowledge and information, as well as used for ceremonies. Pictographs were also used for ceremonies.

Aadizookaan

Traditional stories known as the aadizookaanan ("traditional stories," singular aadizookaan) are told by the debaajimojig ("story-tellers," singular debaajimod), only in winter in order to preserve their transformative powers. In the aadizookaan many 'manidoog ("spiritual beings") are encountered. These include, but are not limited to:

Gitchi-manidoo

Gichi-manidoo (Gitchi Manitou, Gitche Manito) is the "Great Spirit," God, the Creator of all things and the Giver of Life, sometimes translated as the "Great Mystery." Manitou is an Anishinaabe word for spirit, spiritual, mystery, mysterious, or deity. Historically, Anishinaabe people believed in a variety of spirits, whose images were placed near doorways for protection. With the coming of Christian missionaries and their need to translate the idea of monotheism, Gitche Manitou meaning "Great Spirit" was coined. The term Manitou itself refers to the concept of one aspect of the interconnection and balance of nature/life; in simpler terms it can refer to a spirit. This spirit is seen as a (contactable) person as well as a concept. Everything has its own manitou—every plant, every stone and even machines. These Manitous do not exist in a hierarchy like European gods/goddesses, but are more akin to one part of the body interacting with another and the spirit of everything; the collective is named Gitche Manitou.

Nanabozho

Nanabozho (also known by a variety of other names and spellings, including Wenabozho, Menabozho, and Nanabush) figures prominently in Anishinaabe storytelling, including the story of the world's creation. Nanabozho is the Ojibwa trickster figure and culture hero (these two archetypes are often combined into a single figure in First Nations mythologies). He was the son of Wiininwaa ("Nourishment"), a human mother, and E-bangishimog ("In the West"), a spirit father. He was sent to Earth in the form of a rabbit by Gitchi Manitou to teach the Ojibwa, and one of his first tasks was to name all the plants and animals.

Nanabozho is considered to be the founder of Midewiwin. He features as the protagonist of a cycle of stories that serve as the Anishinaabe origin myth. The cycle, which varies somewhat from community to community, tells the story of Nanabozho's conception, birth, and his ensuing adventures, which involve interactions with spirit and animal beings, the creation of the Earth, and the establishment of the Midewiwin. The myth cycle explains the origin of several traditions, including mourning customs, beliefs about the afterlife, and the creation of the sacred plant asemaa (tobacco).

Bagwajinini

Bagwajiwininiwag is Anishinaabe for Bigfoot or Sasquatch, literally meaning "Wildmen" or "Wildernessmen." In the aadizookaan, they represent honesty.

E-bangishimog

E-bangishimog is the west wind, manidoo of ultimate destiny. E-bangishimog's children include Majiikiwis, Jiibayaabooz, and Nanabozho.

Jiibayaabooz

Jiibayaabooz is a "Spirit Rabbit" who taught methods of communication with the manidoog through dreams, vision quests, and purification ceremonies. He is the "Chief of the Underworld."

Nibiinaabewag

Nibiinaabewag/niibinaabekwewag ("Watermen"/"Waterman-women," singular nibiinaabe/nibiinaabekwe) are mermen and mermaids.

Nookomis

Nookomis (the "Grandmother") is the Earth-Mother, the one from whom is derived the Water of Life, who feeds plants, animals, and men. She is also known as Ogashiinan ("Dearest Mother"), Omizakamigokwe ("Throughout the Earth Woman") or Giizhigookwe ("Sky Woman").

Wiindigoog

Wiindigoog (singular wiindigoo, Anglicized to Wendigo) are giant, powerful, malevolent cannibalistic spirits associated with the Winter and the North. If a human ever resorts to cannibalism to survive, they are said to become possessed by the spirit of a wiindigoo, and develop an overpowering desire for more human flesh.

Wiininwaa

Wiininwaa ("Nourishment") is a woman who became immortal through manidoowiziwin (the process of taking on qualities of a Manitou). She is the daughter of Nookomis and mother of Nanabozho.

Migration story

According to the oral history, seven great miigis (radiant/iridescent) beings appeared to the peoples in the Waabanakiing (Land of the Dawn or Eastern Land) to teach the peoples of the mide way of life. However, one of the seven great miigis beings was too spiritually powerful and killed the peoples in the Waabanakiing when the people were in its presence. The six great miigis beings remained to teach while the one returned into the ocean. The six great miigis beings then established doodem (clans) for the peoples in the east. Then these six miigis beings returned into the ocean as well. If the seventh miigis being stayed, it would have established the Thunderbird doodem.

At a later time, one of these miigis beings appeared in a vision to relate a prophecy. The prophecy stated that if more of the Anishinaabeg did not move further west, they would not be able to keep their traditional ways alive because of the many new settlements and European immigrants that would arrive soon in the east. Their migration path would be symbolized by a series of smaller Turtle Islands, which was confirmed with miigis shells (cowry shells). After receiving assurance from the their "Allied Brothers" (Mi'kmaq) and "Father" (Abnaki) of their safety in having many more of the Anishinaabeg move inland, they advanced along the St. Lawrence River to the Ottawa River to Lake Nipissing, and then to the Great Lakes. First of these smaller Turtle Islands was Mooniyaa, which Mooniyaang (Montreal, Quebec) now stands. The "second stopping place" was in the vicinity of the Wayaanag-gakaabikaa (Concave Waterfalls, Niagara Falls). At their "third stopping place" near the present-day city of Detroit, Michigan, the Anishinaabeg divided into six divisions, of which the Ojibwa was one of these six. The first significant new Ojibwa culture-center was their "fourth stopping place" on Manidoo Minising (Manitoulin Island). Their first new political-centre was referred as their "fifth stopping place," in their present country at Baawiting (Sault Ste. Marie).

Continuing their westward expansion, the Ojibwa divided into the "northern branch" following the north shore of Lake Superior, and "southern branch" following the south shore of the same lake. In their expansion westward, the "northern branch" divided into a "westerly group" and a "southerly group." The "southern branch" and the "southerly group" of the "northern branch" came together at their "sixth stopping place" on Spirit Island located in the St. Louis River estuary of Duluth/Superior region where the people were directed by the miigis being in a vision to go to the "place where there is food (wild rice) upon the waters." Their second major settlement, referred as their "seventh stopping place," was at Shaugawaumikong (or Zhaagawaamikong, French, Chequamegon) on the southern shore of Lake Superior, near the present La Pointe near Bayfield, Wisconsin. The "westerly group" of the "northern branch" continued their westward expansion along the Rainy River, Red River of the North, and across the northern Great Plains until reaching the Pacific Northwest. Along their migration to the west they came across many miigis, or cowry shells, as told in the prophecy.

Deluge

Main article: Deluge (mythology)

The Ojibwa also have a story of a Great Deluge that has been passed down from generation to generation over the centuries. They tell of a time long ago when the Anishinaabeg began to argue amongst themselves and lost respect for all living creatures. The Creator, Gichi Manidoo, saw this situation and brought a great flood on the earth, killing almost every person and living thing. This punishment is a lesson that has guided Ojibwa lifestyle, teaching them to live in harmony with all creation (Cubie 2007).

Traditions and ceremonies

Objects like drums, pipes, and tobacco play significant roles in ceremonies. A drum represents the "circle of life" and must undergo a special ceremony before it can be used to heal and unify people (Schneider 2003).

Tobacco

Asemaa (Tobacco) represents east. Though pure tobacco is commonly used today, traditionally "kinnikinnick"—a giniginige ("mixture") of primarily red osier dogwood with bearberry and tobacco, and occasionally with other additional medicinal plants—was used. The tobacco or its mixture is used in the offering of prayer, acting as a medium for communication. It is either offered through the fire so the smoke can lift the prayers to the Gichi-manidoo, or it is set on the ground in a clean place as an offering. This is done on a daily basis as each new day is greeted with prayers of thankfulness. Tobacco is also the customary offering when seeking knowledge or advice from an Elder or when a Pipe is present.

Dreamcatchers

Main article: Dreamcatcher
A dreamcatcher.

A dreamcatcher (or dream catcher; Ojibwe asabikeshiinh, is a handmade object based on a willow hoop. Traditionally, the Ojibwa construct dreamcatchers by tying sinew strands in a web around a small round or tear-shaped frame (in a way roughly similar to their method for making snowshoe webbing). The dreamcatcher is decorated with personal and sacred items such as feathers and beads.

The resulting "dream-catcher," hung above the bed, is then used to protect sleeping children from nightmares. The Ojibwa believe that a dreamcatcher filters a person's dreams: Only good dreams would be allowed to filter through; bad dreams would stay in the net, disappearing with the light of day (Andrews 1997).

Jingle dress

A contemporary jingle dress

The "jingle dress" is a dance dress worn by women participating in the "Jingle Dress Dance" at a Pow wow. Made of cloth, the dress includes several rows of metal cones, which are sewn across the dress on the skirt (and blouse, in some areas). The metal cones create a jingling sound as the dancer moves. The Jingle Dress Dance is characterized by light footwork danced close to the ground. The dancer dances in a snake-like pattern around the drum; her feet never cross, nor does she dance backward or turn a complete circle.

The jingle dress is considered a healing dress. Its origin is attributed to several Ojibwa communities in which a vivid recurring dream was experienced. The dream came to a Midewinini, a medicine-man or shaman. In the dream there were four women, each wearing a jingle dress and dancing. The dream also gave instructions on how to make the dresses, what types of songs went with them, and how the dance was to be performed. The story continues that the reason for this recurring dream was because the daughter (in some versions the grand-daughter) of the Midewinini was gravely ill. When the dance was performed in the presence of the child, in the way shown in the dream, the child recovered.

This happened around 1900 and spread throughout Ojibwa reservations. In the late 1920s, the jingle dress was given to the Lakota and it spread westward into the Dakotas and Montana.

Snowshoe dance

Ancient Ojibwa tradition: The Snowshoe Dance, performed at the first snowfall every year since time immemorial, by George Catlin 1835.

Every year at the first snow, a traditional Snowshoe dance is performed. This dance celebrates the coming of the snow, an essential part of the cycle of life for which they give thanks, and also reminds them of the necessity for snowshoes to aid them in traveling through snow in order to hunt and they dance in hope of a successful hunt and thus to survive the winter. The snowshoe dance was performed around a tall pole with a pair of snowshoes suspended from the top.

The snow-shoe dance … is exceedingly picturesque, being danced with the snow shoes under the feet, at the falling of the first snow in the beginning of winter, when they sing a song of thanksgiving to the Great Spirit for sending them a return of snow, when they can run on their snow shoes in their valued hunts, and easily take the game for their food (Catlin 1995).

Sweat lodge

Main article: Sweat lodge

Sweat lodges are very important in Ojibwa spiritual life. A visit to the sweat lodge cleanses both the body and spirit. Supported by fasting and meditation, the sweat lodge is a place to receive guidance on how to live one's life in accord with the spirits (Schneider 2003).

Sun dance

The Sun Dance (known as the Rain Dance among the Saulteaux) is a ceremony practiced by a number of Native Americans, particularly the Plains Indians. There are distinct rituals and methods of performing the dance, but they generally include dancing, singing, praying, drumming, the experience of visions, fasting, and in some cases piercing of the chest or back. Most notable for early Western observers was the piercing many young men endure as part of the ritual. The object of being pierced is to sacrifice one's self to the Great Spirit, and to pray while connected to the Tree of Life, a direct connection to the Great Spirit. Breaking from the piercing is done in one moment, as the man runs backwards from the tree at a time specified by the leader of the dance.

The Government of Canada officially persecuted Sun Dance practitioners and attempted to suppress the Sun Dance on many Canadian plains reserves starting in 1882 until the 1940s. The flesh-sacrifice and gift-giving features were legally outlawed in 1895. Despite the subjugation, Sun Dance practitioners, including Saulteaux, continued to hold Sun Dances throughout the persecution period, minus the prohibited features. At least one Cree or Saulteaux Rain Dance has occurred each year since 1880 somewhere on the Canadian Plains. In 1951 government officials revamped the Indian Act and dropped the legislation that forbade flesh-sacrificing and gift-giving (Pettipas 1994).

Contemporary Ojibwa

Contemporary Ojibwa still use the sweat lodge during important ceremonies and to pass along their oral history. Teaching lodges are common to teach the next generations about the language and ancient ways of the past. Many people still follow the traditional ways of harvesting wild rice, picking berries, hunting, making medicines, and making maple sugar. Many of the Ojibwa take part in sun dance ceremonies across the continent.

Several Ojibwa bands in the United States cooperate in the Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission, which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the Lake Superior-Lake Michigan areas. The commission follows the directives of U.S. agencies to run several wilderness areas. Some Minnesota Ojibwa tribal councils cooperate in the 1854 Treaty Authority, which manages their treaty hunting and fishing rights in the Arrowhead Region. In Michigan, the Chippewa-Ottawa Resource Authority manages the hunting, fishing and gathering rights about Sault Ste. Marie, and the waters of Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. In Canada, the Grand Council of Treaty #3 manages the Treaty 3 hunting and fishing rights around Lake of the Woods.

Members of the Red Lake Band of Ojibwa in northern Minnesota are making efforts to live in harmony with their land, restoring fisheries, and enhancing wetlands and other wildlife habitats. Despite facing poverty and high levels of unemployment on their reservation, tribal members support these conservation efforts. Although their lifestyle has changed significantly, the traditional "ricing" practice is being restored in the belief that it helps both people and wildlife, bringing a greater balance to life. When gathering rice in the traditional way they knock some grains back into the lake to sustain future harvests, as well as leaving others on the plants as food for birds. A commercial wild rice farm now offers income and also the habitat needed for both waterfowl and shorebirds (Cubie 2007).

Notable Ojibwa

Ojibwa people have achieved much in many walks of life—from the chiefs of old to more recent artists, scholars, sportsmen, and activists. The following are a few examples.

  • Dennis Banks, a Native American leader, teacher, lecturer, activist and author, was born on Leech Lake Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota. In 1968 he co-founded the American Indian Movement (AIM), an activist group that works for Indian rights both on and off the reservations. In addition to protecting the traditional ways of Indian people, engaging in legal cases protecting treaty rights of Natives, such as hunting and fishing, trapping, and wild rice farming, the organization has a large number of urban Indian members who live and work in large cities and whose rights the organization also defends.
  • James Bartleman grew up in the Muskoka town of Port Carling, a member of the Chippewas of Mnjikaning First Nation. A Canadian diplomat and author, he served as the 27th Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario from 2002 to 2007.
  • Carl Beam (1943-2005), (born Carl Edward Migwans) made Canadian art history as the first artist of Native ancestry to have his work purchased by the National Gallery of Canada as Contemporary Art. His mother, Barbara Migwans was the Ojibwa daughter of Dominic Migwans who was then the Chief of the Ojibways of West Bay and his father, Edward Cooper, was an American soldier.
  • Chief Buffalo (Ojibwe: Ke-che-waish-ke/Gichi-weshkiinh – "Great-renewer" or Peezhickee/Bizhiki – "Buffalo"; also French, Le Beouf) was an Ojibwa leader born at La Pointe in the Apostle Islands group of Lake Superior, in what is now northern Wisconsin. Recognized as the principal chief of the Lake Superior Chippewa for nearly a half-century until his death in 1855, he led his nation into a treaty relationship with the United States Government. He was also instrumental in resisting the efforts of the United States to remove the Chippewa and in securing permanent reservations for his people near Lake Superior.
  • Hanging Cloud (Ojibwa name Ah-shah-way-gee-she-go-qua (Aazhawigiizhigokwe in the contemporary spelling), meaning "Goes Across the Sky Woman") was an Ojibwa woman who was a full warrior (ogichidaakwe in Ojibwe) among her people.
  • Karen Louise Erdrich, author of novels, poetry, and children's books, continued the Ojibwa tradition of self-expression in her writings.
  • Winona LaDuke, activist, environmentalist, economist, and writer, ran for election to the office of Vice President of the United States in 1996 and 2000 as the nominee of the United States Green Party, on the ticket headed by Ralph Nader.
  • Ted Nolan, born on the Garden River Ojibwa First Nation Reserve outside of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada served as Head Coach of the Buffalo Sabres and New York Islanders after retirement as a Canadian professional hockey Left Winger. He played three seasons in the National Hockey League for the Detroit Red Wings and Pittsburgh Penguins.
  • O-zaw-wen-dib or Ozaawindib, "Yellow Head" in English) was an Ojibwa warrior who lived in the early nineteenth century and was described as an egwakwe ("agokwa" in literature) or two-spirit—a man who dressed and acted as a woman.
  • Keewaydinoquay Pakawakuk Peschel was a scholar, ethnobotanist, herbalist, medicine woman, teacher, and author. She was an Anishinaabeg Elder of the Crane Clan, born in Michigan around 1919 and spent time on Garden Island, Michigan, a traditional Anishinaabeg homeland.
  • Keith Secola, an award-winning figure in contemporary Native American music, an Ojibwa originally from Minnesota and graduated from the University of Minnesota with a degree in American Indian Studies.
  • Gerald Vizenor, an enrolled member of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe, White Earth Reservation, one of the most prolific Native American writers with over 25 books to his name, he also taught for many years at the University of California, Berkeley, where he was Director of Native American Studies.

Gallery

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Andrews, Terri J. 1997. Living By The Dream. The Turquoise Butterfly Press. Retrieved October 28, 2008.
  • Catlin, George. [1844] 1995. Letters and Notes on the North American Indians: Two Volumes in One. World Publications. ISBN 1572151951
  • Cubie, Doreen. 2007. Restoring a Lost Legacy. National Wildlife 45(4): 39-45.
  • Densmore, Frances. [1929, 1979] 2008. Chippewa Customs. reprint ed. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1436683241
  • Densmore, Frances. [1913] 2006. Chippewa Music. reprint ed. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1425499563
  • Erdrich, Louise. 2003. Books and Islands in Ojibwe Country. National Geographic. ISBN 0792257197
  • Hlady, Walter M. 1961. Indian Migrations in Manitoba and the West. Manitoba Historical Society Transactions, Series 3. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
  • Hodge, Frederick Webb. [1912] 2003. Chippewa. Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. ISBN 1582187487. Digital Scanning Inc. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
  • Hoffman, Walter James. 2005. The Mide'wiwin: Grand Medicine Society of the Ojibway. Honolulu, HI: University Press of the Pacific. ISBN 1410222969
  • Johnston, Basil. [1987] 1990. Ojibway Ceremonies. Lincoln, NE: Bison Books. ISBN 0803275730
  • Johnston, Basil. [1976] 1990.Ojibway Heritage. Lincoln, NE: Bison Books. ISBN 0803275722
  • Johnston, Basil. [1995] 2001. The Manitous: The Spiritual World of the Ojibway. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 0873514114
  • Johnston, Basil H. 2007. Anishinaubae Thesaurus. Michigan State University Press. ISBN 978-0870137532
  • Jones, William. [1917] 2007. Ojibwa Texts. Retrieved October 30, 2008. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0548575925
  • Pettipas, Katherine. 1994. Severing the Ties that Bind: Government Repression of Indigenous Religious Ceremonies on the Prairies. Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press. ISBN 0887556388
  • Roy, Loriene. 2008. Ojibwa. Multicultural America. Retrieved October 29, 2008.
  • Schneider, Karoline. 2003. The Culture and Language of the Minnesota Ojibwe: An Introduction. Kee's Ojibwe page. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
  • Sultzman, Lee. 2000. Ojibwe History. First Nations Histories. Retrieved October 30, 2008.
  • Tanner, John. [1830] 2007. A Narrative Of The Captivity And Adventures Of John Tanner, U. S. Interpreter At The Saut De Ste. Marie During Thirty Years Residence Among The Indians In The Interior Of North America. reprint ed. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0548213131
  • Thwaites, Reuben Gold, ed. [1640] 1898. Hurons and Québec. The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents: Travels and Explorations of the Jesuit Missionaries in New France 1610—1791 Vol. XVIII. Cleveland, OH: The Burrows Brothers. Computerized transcription by Tomasz Mentrak. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
  • Vizenor, Gerald. 1984. The People Named the Chippewa: Narrative Histories. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0816613052
  • Waldman, Carl. 2006. Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes. New York: Checkmark Books. ISBN 978-0816062744.
  • Warren, William W. [1851] 1984. History of the Ojibway People. St. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 087351162X

External links

All links retrieved November 17, 2022.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.