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Anishinaabeg Agriculture and Agro-Forestry Curriculum

Why this curriculum?

Throughout Anishinaabe Akiing there is a resurgence and revitalization of interest in our traditional foods and life ways. This is part of our prophecies as Anishinaabeg people, the time of the seventh fire. This is also very much an essential response to the present economic, health and fossil fuels world this generation has come to live in. The rising costs of foods, combined with the decline of their nutritional value, mean that a more localized food system is important for all people -- including our Anishinaabeg people. Our health concerns remain deep, as many of our communities face staggering rates of diabetes, afflicting up to one third of our population. The human, economic, and physical consequences of this epidemic are devastating to our communities. In response to this, more of our communities are coming back to our traditional nutrition and traditional foods, as not only studies point to this essential strategy, but common sense revitalizes good thinking and practices. As the resurgence of Anishinaabeg traditional cultural practices continues to grow, we find as well, that our ceremonies require traditional foods. Our cultural practices call for first feasts of all the gifts of the seasons -- whether maple syrup, berries, or wild rice and corn harvests. Similarly, our dance and ceremonial traditions require the foods which feed, not only the bellies, but the spirits as well. These are some of the reasons we have taken to writing this curriculum. There is, however, more: Anishinabeg and northern Indigenous farming, harvesting, and land management practices (cultural landscaping) have great tenacity and hold a wealth of knowledge about sustainability. For many years, these practices have had little attention, and have -- for political, economic, and other colonial reasons -- been subsumed to dominant land tenure practices, industrialized agriculture, and even adapted organic practices which may have excellent resonance (or results), but would be strengthened by the cultural knowledge of our communities. These practices came from Anishinaabe Akiing and the people themselves who have moved through this land. These practices are finely honed for micro-climates of this region, and, indeed, for the cultures of this region. We believe these teachings may have some relevance in a time of climate change. In this booklet, we describe some of this knowledge, provide historic and some scientific discussions and offer a tool set for the Anishinaabeg farmers and producers of this generation -- honoring our ancestors and traditions.

TOPICS Module 2: Indigenous Science and Knowledge Systems in Academia Why This Discussion is Important This is not a discourse on industrialized agriculture, and how it has impacted the ecosystems, world nutrition, and markets. This is a discussion of paradigms of learning and the relevance of Indigenous knowledge systems to agriculture. Dr. Gregory Cajete in Igniting the Sparkle, an Indigenous Science Education Model discusses the unique nature of Indigenous knowledges and their importance in a science curriculum, particularly in Indigenous studies, and, I would argue, discussions and studies of sustainability. Thunderbirds and monster snakes are important items in the behavioral environment of these Indians. Since from our view thunder is a part of our physical environment, monster snakes are not, we might be inclined to make a distinction between them. But if we do this we are making our categories a point of departure. (74). 1 Many of the principles of western science are based on a type of logic and mindset which require hierarchical thinking. Non reciprocal causality, for instance, requires that one think of phenomena in the following way, according to Marayama as cited by Cajete: That for every effect there is one single cause which can be objectively observed and described given the proper tools, the correct hypothesis and appropriate experimentation. Non reciprocal, or what has been popularly termed linear thinking conditions for monopolarization in both thinking and personality development . Mono explanation is defined as a psychological need to believe that there is one universal truth, and to seek out, find secret in, and hang onto one authority, one theory , uniformity, homogeneity, and standardization (76).2 The mindset of nonreciprocal causality is one of the unconscious dimensions inherent in the cultural mindset of Western science and is reflected in the way science is presented in American schools. Mutualistic logic and orientation to reciprocal causality (the notion that cause and effect in nature have a reciprocal effect on each other -- that cause and effect cannot be isolated from the other causes and effects with which they share a holistic relationship within a system) is illustrated by the concept and expression of mutualism among the Navajo people (460-62).3 The mutual relationship between all things in the natural world animals, plants, humans, celestial bodies, sprits and natural forces forms the basis for traditional Navajo concepts of the Universe. The Navajo believe that this natural phenomena can be manipulated by humans through the application of the appropriate practical and ritualistic knowledge. In turn, natural phenomena, forces, and other living things can effect things

1 2

Cajete, A. Gregory. Igniting the Sparkle: An Indigenous Science Education Model. Michigan: Kivaki Press, 1999. Cajete, A. Gregory. Igniting the Sparkle: An Indigenous Science Education Model. Michigan: Kivaki Press, 1999. 3 Cajete, A. Gregory. Igniting the Sparkle: An Indigenous Science Education Model. Michigan: Kivaki Press, 1999.

in a number of ways. Therefore everything affects everything else through the complex web of interrelationships.. (76).4 Theory of mutual intelligences Gardener suggests that there are at least seven domains of intelligence, many more than had been formerly acknowledged by other researchers. These are linguistic, logical/mathematical, spatial, kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal (understanding of people), and intrapersonal (understanding of self )5, notes Scherer, discussing Howard Gardener in Cajete (63). I would add spiritual intelligence and interspecies intelligence as well. Simply stated, this is an ability to communicate with the spiritual world, a plane which exists in the Anishinaabe world as a parallel world, and is accessed through prayer, ceremony, or may manifest when it decides to do so. The Anishinaabe world undulates between the spiritual and physical planes, and this is recognized as our reality. This is discussed above in the discussion on the Navajo world view. An inter-species intelligence refers initially back to the cosmo-geneology, and fluidity between species and transformation. Even the story of how corn came to the Anishinaabeg harkens to a time when corn arrived as a visitor in human form. However, the Dodaem, or clan system of the Anishinaabeg, the constant relationship of speaking to animals, and an aptitude to understand animals (in America perhaps best popularized in movies like The Horse Whisperer or Free Willy.) is considered a gift and recognized as a domain.

This broader understanding is reflected in most non-western worldviews, where spiritual practices are essential to all cultural practices, including food production. This is why in an Anishinaabeg world view, the practices, for instance of reciprocity, or making an offering before one harvests, taking only what one needs, and then offering a feast of the first harvest for the spirits and all to celebrate displays the practice of spiritual intelligence. As does speaking to relatives who have fins, wings, or roots. The American practice of Thanksgiving is an adaptation of a multi-cultural practice of a harvest feast, resonating with most agriculturally based societies. Indigenous societies have a larger practice of reciprocity for all harvests, which insures sustainability and a balance. The Story of the Moose in Native American Animal Stories by Joseph Bruchac tells of this reciprocity, and exemplifies this spiritual intelligence: One night, a family of moose was sitting in the lodge. As they sat around the fire, a strange thing happened. A pipe came floating in through the door. Sweet-smelling smoke came from the long pipe
4 5

Cajete, A. Gregory. Igniting the Sparkle: An Indigenous Science Education Model. Michigan: Kivaki Press, 1999. Cajete, A. Gregory. Igniting the Sparkle: An Indigenous Science Education Model. Michigan: Kivaki Press, 1999.

and it circled the lodge, passing close to each of the Moose People. The old bull moose saw the pipe but said nothing, and it passed him by. The cow moose said nothing, and the pipe passed her by also. So it passed by each of the Moose People until it reached the youngest of the young bull moose near the door of the lodge. You have come to me, he said to the pipe. Then he reached out and took the pipe and started to smoke it. My son, the old moose said, you have killed us. This is a pipe from the human beings. They are smoking this pipe now and asking for success in their hunt. Now, tomorrow, they will find us. Now, because you smoked their pipe, they will be able to get us. I am not afraid, said the young bull moose. I can run faster than any of the people. They cannot catch me. But the old bull moose said nothing more. When the morning came, the Moose People left their lodge. They went across the land looking for food. But as they reached the edge of the forest, they caught the scent of the hunters. It was the time of year when there is a thin crust on the snow and the moose found it hard to move quickly. These human hunters will catch us, said the old cow moose. Their feet are feathered like those of the grouse. They can walk on top of the snow. Then they began to run as the hunters followed them. The young bull moose who has taken the pipe ran off with the others. He was still sure he could outrun the hunters. But the hunters were on snowshoes, and the young mooses feet sank into the snow. They followed him until he tired, and then they killed him. After they killed him, they thanked him for smoking their pipe and giving himself to them so they could survive. They treated his body with care, and they soothed his spirit. That night, the young bull moose woke up in his lodge among his people. Next to his bed was a present given him by the human hunters. He showed it to all of the others. You see, he said. It was not a bad thing for me to accept the long pipe the human people sent to us. Those hunters treated me with respect. It is right for us to allow the human beings to catch us. And so it is to this day. Those hunters who show respect to the moose are always the ones who are successful when they hunt (5-8).6
6

Bruchac, Joseph. Native American Animal Stories. Fulcrum Publishing: 1999

TOPICS Module 3: The Political Exclusion of Indigenous Knowledge Systems Their principal food was wild game, fish and hulled corn. They caught large quantities of
sturgeon and trout, and they made immense quantities of maple sugar. At the proper season in the spring, the entire settlement would remove to their sugar-camps, often remain two months, each family making eight or ten hundred pounds of the finest sugar I ever saw.6

Leo G. Waisberg & Tim E. Holzkamm, DRAFT (WORK IN PROGRESS) - WITHOUT PREJUDICE, American Society for Ethnohistory - 13 November 1998 Special Session - Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe Reserva on, Ojibwe (Anishinaabeg) Natural Resource Use in the Face of Government Regula on: Historical and Cultural Perspec ves Peaceful Pursuit of the Indian Happiness: Anishinaabeg Resources in the Boundary Waters A er Treaty #3, Treaty & Aboriginal Rights Research, Grand Council Treaty #3, Kenora, Ontario

Discussion Questions: How does the marginalization of Indigenous knowledge serve colonialism?

Questions: 1)Discuss knowledge systems and valuation of knowledge systems. 2) What is minobimaatisiiwin and how does the practice of thanksgiving relate to sustainability. 3) How is Anishinaabe botanical knowledge obtained?

Readings
Session 2: The Political Exclusion of Indigenous Knowledge Systems Module Topics Readings From the text: Jack Weatherford Native Roots, How the Indians Enriched America. New York, NY: Ballantine Books, l99l. Charles Mann l49l Introduction Omaa Akiing In the Beginning and Spiritual Foundations Also see: United Nations The Doctrine of Discovery and Colonialism The Doctrine of Discovery, The International Law of Colonialism Conference Room Paper11th Session of the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues7-18 May 2012 Professor Robert Miller Brody, Hugh. The Peoples Land: Eskimos and Whites in the Easter Arctic. New York, NY: Penguin Books, 1977. Newcomb, Steven. Pagans in the Promised Land: Decoding the Doctrine of Christian Discovery. Golden, CO: Fulcrum Publishing, 2008. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. O'Sullivan, John L. (JulyAugust 1845). "Annexation". United States

Magazine and Democratic Review 17 (1): 510. Retrieved 2008-05-20. United States. Office of Indian Affairs Annual report of the commissioner of Indian affairs, for the year 1866 G.P.O., [1866] v. : fold. maps ; 23 cm. Childs, Colonel Ebenezer. "Recollections of Wisconsin Since 1820." 1859. MS. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin. 508 p. ; 23 cm.

Research Articles:

Assignments
TOPICS Module 3: Ricing and Harvest Mid-September
Septemberish: Wabaabagaa Giizis Changing Leaves Moon (Wa-bah-ba-gah) Variants: Waatebagaa-giizis, Mandaamini-giizis, Moozo-giizis Translations: Leaves Changing Color Moon, Corn Moon, Moose Moon

DAY 1: 1 2 3 4 DAY 2: 5 6 7 8 9 DAY 3: 10 11 12 13 14 Anishinaabe knowledge and the powers of agriculture Equity intergenerational, interspecies, etc. Nutrition and Native Agriculture (including seasonal eating) Opening traditional dinner Journaling Ricing Day Anishinaabeg Economics Wild rice and the Anishinaabeg people Ricing Preparing a traditional Anishinaabeg fall meal Journaling Harvesting and preserving foods traditional preservation and storage methods Re-envisioning tribal food economics Economic Paradigms of Sustainability Restoration and Remediation Journaling

Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. Newcomb, Steven. Pagans in the Promised Land: Decoding the Doctrine of Christian Discovery. Golden, CO: Fulcrum Publishing, 2008. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003.

Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. O'Sullivan, John L. (JulyAugust 1845). "Annexation". United States Magazine and Democratic Review 17 (1): 5 10. Retrieved 2008-05-20. ''Terra Nullius. English Dictionary. www.allwords.com/wordterra+nullius.html|publisher=Allwords.com: 15 June 2010. Brody, Hugh. The Peoples Land: Eskimos and Whites in the Easter Arctic. New York, NY: Penguin Books, 1977. Jack Weatherford Native Roots, How the Indians Enriched America. New York, NY: Ballantine Books, l99l. Jack Weatherford Native Roots, How the Indians Enriched America. New York, NY: Ballantine Books, l99l. Brody, Hugh. The Peoples Land: Eskimos and Whites in the Easter Arctic. New York, NY: Penguin Books, 1977. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. United States. Office of Indian Affairs Annual report of the commissioner of Indian affairs, for the year 1866 G.P.O., [1866] v. : fold. maps ; 23 cm. Childs, Colonel Ebenezer. "Recollections of Wisconsin Since 1820." 1859. MS. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin. 508 p. ; 23 cm.

TOPICS Module 4: Appropriation of Anishinaabe Agricultural Lands

The US government never claimed to hold or control Anishinaabeg land by right of conquest, rather, it claims to have legally acquired Anishinaabeg and other Native lands by mutual agreement. Between 1785 and 1923, the US, England, and Canada entered into more than 40 treaties with the Anishinaabeg, the basis for some of the largest land transactions in world history. Some of the first incursions onto Anishinaabeg land were to secure access to iron and copper deposits. By 1800, representatives of both the Queen of England and the emerging United States had discovered a 2,500 pound boulder of naturally occurring copper called the Ontonogan Boulder resting on the south shore of Lake Superior in Anishinaabeg territory in what is now known as the Keewanaw Peninsula. By the 1820s, the federal government had tried to do a comprehensive study of mineral assets of the Lake Superior area, and a study of Indian title to the land therein. Within a very short period, four treaties were signed by the United States each providing for mining in Anishinaabeg territory. These treaties covered both the Kewanee Penininsula and the Mesabe Sleeping Giant iron-ore belt in northern Minnesota. By mid-century, more than 100 copper companies had been incorporated in (M W and M) Territories. As early as 1849, copper production at Keewenaw Peninsula in Anishinaabe territory led the world. Similarly, beginning in 1890, mining at northern Minnesotas Mesabe accounted for 75 % of all US iron ore production. Many of today's US-based transnational mining companies were founded on this era and the wealth of the Anishinaabeg. This includes, for instance, Kennecott and Anaconda Copper, and 3M. After the Miskwaabik (the copper), the iron ore emerged, and in the time of Thunderbings the wild rice was also here. Called manoomin by the Anishinaabe, or a seed of the Creator, manoomin is the only grain endemic to North America, and is one of the greatest gifts imaginable to the land and waters. Indeed, it was a part of the Anishinaabeg migration story, and set of prophecies, in which the people were instructed to go to the place where the food grows upon the water. There are few other places in the world where such a bountiful gift is

delivered to those who live there, whether they have wings or hands. The lakes and rivers, owing to the unique nature and adaptability of the manoomin, each year offer a wild rice crop at some place in the region. That is an amazing food security for a people, and the waterfowl who nest and eat in these same waters. To the south of the US/Canadian Borders Anishinaabeg territory, this is what transpired: a set of treaties aimed at getting access to the mineral resources of the region, and later the trees. Great empires emerged, and they moved worldwide. For many decades, however, the Anishinaabe were central to the fur trade, and the lands were not viewed in a traditional pastoralist eye, and as such, did not become prey to larger Industrial American society. It was the water itself, however, which has become the foundation of the destruction of Anishinaabe Agricultural lands -- these lands were taken for dam projects, in most of our region. Sabaskong, Rainy River, and Ontario and Manitoba Northern Sites The Ojibwe did not build ridged fields in Manitoba or southwestern Ontario. Yet the Ojibwe who lived at the Garden Island, Lake St. Martin, and Mossy River sites deserve special mention as sophisticated agriculturalists. Each of these sites is located at about 5l.45 N latitude. Andthey remain the northernmost sites for native maize agriculture in North America (203).7 Maize de Ocho (northern flint) was found in an archaeological dig at the Lockport Site, south of Winnipeg.. along with bison scapula hoes, and storage pits. This site was dated at l450-l500, at the onset of the Little Ice age.8 Although principally known as hunters and gatherers, they became the northernmost maize agriculturalists in North America. During the early l9th century the Ojibwe practiced agriculture at a scale that affected timber leases, as improved lands were tantamount to ownership in late l9th century Canada. Sadly the Canadian government actively discouraged Native agriculture in the decades following permanent EuroCanadian settlement there, reported Waisberg and Holzkahham (203).9 On the appropriation of the land and the Indian Agent Policies Two major practices of colonization effected Native agriculture in the north country: the dams and the government policies, and they went hand-in-hand. The first set of policies, enacted well in Manitoba, was that of denying Native farmers markets. The Canadian government wanted European settlers to engage in agriculture and not rely on Native people, thus a set of laws was enacted to make it very difficult to purchase food from Native people. As historian Tim Holzkamm explains in an interview: The question is the beginning of Native Agriculture here in the north, and then how it was sabotaged by the Canadian government. So an independent people were forced into a peasant agricultural model, and then lost the rights to sell. It was illegal for people to buy produce from

Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. 8 Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. 9 Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003.

Indians without a permit from around l882-l950Anyone who bought it could be arrestedThis was coupled with the flooding of the lakes and the taking of the lands.10 Navigation and power dams further decreased Anishinaabeg ability to secure a living. In 1887 a dam at the outlet of Lake of the Woods flooded traditional lands. Wild rice beds, hay meadows, graves, and homes were also destroyed, despite protests from the Grand Council. Nothing was done to relieve the situation. Investors in one of the companies which built the dam were Canadas business and political elite, including a Prime Minister11 As Holzkamm, Joan A. Lovisek, and Leo G. Waisberg would write in Deprived of their Living (a paper prepared for Treaty and Aboriginal Rights Research (TARR) Grand Council Treaty #3): During the late 19th century, dams were constructed in northwestern Ontario to facilitate navigation and production of lumber, most destined for the Prairies. Before the arrival of anthropologists, dams caused immense damage to the Ojibwa economy, inducing shifts in settlement and subsistence. Shoreline adaptations based on agriculture and wild rice were disrupted, fields flooded, and villages dispersed inland. Benefits accrued to non-Indian businesses and governments, while Ojibwa fields, in the words of one official, were submerged...several feet under water so that boats could sail over them."12 In terms of policy, Holzkamm would write, The first impact was agriculture. Modernization of farming had been an important inducement to signing a treaty. A large amount of arable land had been selected and set aside as reserves. The first decade after 1873 saw substantial growth of agricultural infrastructure on the reserves, but development ceased after 1882. The federal government legislated control over commercial Indian agriculture by prohibiting sales to consumers without a license. Cultivated lands declined. Commercial farming was replaced by small subsistence and medicine gardens.13 White Earth- the Alienation of a Homeland In l867, the White Earth reservation was created by treaty between the Mississippi Band of Anishinaabeg and the US government, reserving what had then been demarcated as 36 townships. White Earth was soon to become the homeland of the Pillager and some Pembina band members, and was intended for other members of the Gull lake and Sandy Lake bands. They never came, and remained as the non-removable Mille Lacs band of Anishinaabeg. The homeland was chosen for its biodiversity and wealth -- a land covered with white pines, maple basswood forests, and the eastern terrain of the great buffalo herds (a set of biologically diverse prairies).
10

Holzkamm, Tim. Personal Interview. August 4, 2012. Lovisek, Joan A., Leo G. Waisberg, & Tim E. Holzkamm. 1995. Deprived of part of their living: Colonialism and nineteenth-century flooding of Ojibwa lands. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba. 12 Lovisek, Joan A., Leo G. Waisberg, & Tim E. Holzkamm. 1995. Deprived of part of their living: Colonialism and nineteenth-century flooding of Ojibwa lands. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba. 13 Lovisek, Joan A., Leo G. Waisberg, & Tim E. Holzkamm. 1995. Deprived of part of their living: Colonialism and nineteenth-century flooding of Ojibwa lands. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.
11

There is a saying that wealth becomes poverty. That which is coveted, is taken. So it was that the vast agricultural lands of the Anishinaabeg, along with our forests became a centerpiece of the making of a Minnesota logging and agriculture empire. The l889 Nelson Act opened up the White Earth reservation to allotment (an act mirrored by the General Allotment Act). The Nelson Act also annexed four townships with the greatest white pine stands for the state of Minnesota. This was matched by the Steenerson Act, which opened the reservation to clear-cutting. In l889, Minnesota ranked second in the country in logging, with the northwestern portion of the state leading the states production. In l889-90 11 million board feet of timber was taken from the reservation. In the next year, 15 million more feet were cut, followed by another l8 million in the l89l92 season. Not content to take just the forests, the lumber companies and land speculators set their eyes on the land itself. Mechanisms were set in place to pry land from children at boarding school. Soldiers at war, veterans, and those who could not read or write English. A common saying describing what happened in nearby Detroit lakes was fleecing the Indian. A quarter million acres of the White Earth reservation was taken, in addition to lands taken by speculators, by the State of Minnesota as tax payments. By l904 ninety-five percent of the remaining reservation lands were allotted and ten years later some l4 percent of the original and base was still in Indian hands.14 -All Our Relations, Winona LaDuke (ll8-ll9). Near the Narrows of Red Lake This largest village of the Ojibways in Minnesota consists of thirty or forty permanent bark lodges, scattered on an area which reaches a half a mile from the northwest to the southeast, and is 40 to 60 rods wide. Adjoining the village were fields of ripening maize or Indian corn, amounting to about 50 acres. Besides about 5 acres of potatoes and probably an acre or more of squashes. These crops show luxuriant growth and abundant yield and the weeds among them has been held in check by hoeing.... (611)15 Observed by Upham in l885. The significance of native agriculture in on the reserves was widely noted. Gardner notes, that the Anishinaabeg were practicing poly culture not inter-copping.16 Father Joseph Gilfillian, a missionary, also observed that there were many fields of corn around Red Lake in l876.17 Henry Schoolcraft described the corn at ...Cass lake, on the sources of the Mississippi River in l832, and it was the current tradition of the red and white men, that it had been raised and came to perfection so as to preserve the seed from the every early period at Red Lake near the latitude 49 and in the Red Valley of the North.18 Upham also reported a 5 acre agricultural field devoted solely to tubers belonging to the Ojibwe of northern Minnesota (211).19
14 15

LaDuke, Winona. All Our Relations. Cambridge: South End Press, 1999. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. 16 Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. 17 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to the Secretary of the Interior for the Year 1883. District of Columbia. Washington Government Printing Office: 1883. 18 Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. 19 Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003.

What happened to this land and these people? Floods. Inundated by waters, much of the prime agricultural land of the Anishinaabeg of the north, particularly their island gardens, and lowlands upon the rivers edge, became inundated by dam projects. This is the case throughout the region particularly well documented in the case of the Rainy River Ojibwe, and the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara people of the Missouri River Basin. Chequamegon Bay and nearby Madeline Island were dynamic areas in the latter half of the l7th century... A Memoire by Nicholas Perrots reports on Radison and Grosseilliers, who returned to Chequamegon during the spring of l660, where they found Odawa and Huron peoples applying themselves to the cultivation of Indian corn and squashes on which with the fish they catch, they subsist (222).20 Jesuit missionary Jean-Claude Allouez also noted the dynamic agriculture of the region: It is a beautiful bay, at the head of which is situated the great Village of the Savages, who there cultivate fields of Indian corn and lead a settled life. They number eight hundred men bearing arms, but are gathered together from seven different nations, living in peace, mingled with one another.21 Archeological investigations show that the Ojibwe grew maize at the l8th century Marina site, a village located on the southwestern shores of Madeline Island near a contemporary French fort. Approximately l00 maize cobs plus numerous kernels and charred husks were recovered. 95% of the specimens are an Eastern 8 row Northern Flint, with the remaining samples belonging to a small popcorn variety. A single squash seed was also recovered, and at other marina sites woodland strawberry, pin cherry, chokechery, blackberry hazelnut, goose foot seeds were found. Ojibwe myths collected by Kol and Schoolcraft suggest that Native peoples covered young crops with leaves and mulched planting surfaces during frosts, using pots to water plants during droughts (212).22

20

Adventures of Nicolas Perrot, 1665-1670. in Kellogg, Louise P., ed. Early Narratives of the Northwest, 16341699. (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1917). 21 Allouez, Claude Jean; Kellogg, Louis (editor). 'Father Allouez's Journey to Lake Superior, 16651667' in 'Early Narratives of the Northwest, 1634-1699' . New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1917. 22 Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003.

Session 4:
Appropriation of Anishinaabe Agricultural Lands

Topics

Readings

Module

From the text: LaDuke, Winona. All our Relations, l996 South End Press

Meyer, L. Melissa. "We Can Not Get a Living as We Used To": Dispossession and the White Earth Anishinaabeg, 1889-1920. Oxford University Press. The American Historical Review. Vol. 96, No. 2: Ap 1991.
Appropriation of Anishinaabe Agricultural Lands

Lovisek, Joan A., Leo G. Waisberg, & Tim E. Holzkamm. 1995. Deprived of part of their living: Colonialism and nineteenth-century flooding of Ojibwa lands. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba. Madeline Island, Giitiganning.

Assignments TOPICS Module 4: ???

DAY 1: DAY 2: DAY 3:

Discussion Questions:

Bibliography: Adventures of Nicolas Perrot, 1665-1670. in Kellogg, Louise P., ed. Early Narratives of the Northwest, 1634-1699. (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1917). Allouez, Claude Jean; Kellogg, Louis (editor). 'Father Allouez's Journey to Lake Superior, 16651667' in 'Early Narratives of the Northwest, 1634-1699' . New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1917. Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to the Secretary of the Interior for the Year 1883. District of Columbia. Washington Government Printing Office: 1883. Gartner, Gustav William. Raised Field Landscapes of Native North America Thesis (Ph. D.). Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 2003. Lovisek, Joan A., Leo G. Waisberg, & Tim E. Holzkamm. 1995. Deprived of part of their living: Colonialism and nineteenth-century flooding of Ojibwa lands. Papers of the 26th Algonquian Conference, ed. by David H. Pentland. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba.

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