omfrc - january 2017 - keeping our community connected...david bouchard, she's created a...
TRANSCRIPT
January 2017 Forward
In This Issue
In This Issue
What Does It Mean To Be Métis?
The Secret Life of Trees: TheAstonishing Science of WhatTrees Feel and How TheyCommunicate
12 Books by Indigenous WomenYou Should Read
Gutsy Gourmet Native AmericanRecipes
Christi Belcourt Intervieww:Walking With Our Sisters
10 Foods Natives Had BeforeEuropeans
On The Blog: A Legendary Man -Chief Membertou
Métis Scholarships and Bursariesfor 2017
Opportunities Lost - A MemberArticle
A Colouring Book for All Ages:The Seven GrandfathersTeachings.
Native American Woman MayHave Made It to Europe 500Years Before Columbus WasBorn
Music Video - Carlos Nakai:Earth Spirit
The articles in this Newsletter arethe opinions of the authors and
not necessarily those of theproducers of The Feathers In the
Wind Newsletter.
What Does It Mean To
"Winter is the time for comfort, for good food and warmth, for the touch ofa friendly hand and for a talk beside the fire: it is the time for home."
~ Edith SitwellSource: Goodreads
The beautiful coast of Nova Scotia
On The Blog: A Legendary Man - Chief Membertou
Chief Henry Membertou was a central figure to the story of the birth and growthof Acadia, and the legacy of the Mi'kmaq people. His legend has beencelebrated, but this historic and legendary figure was a very interesting man. On
Be Métis?
As a Métis person you are notonly caught between twocultures, but are also part of aculture unique unto itself.
The feeling of not fitting in - ornot knowing where one fits in- is something that many Métispeople experience.
"I grew up being regaled withstories or tales of [my family's]upbringing, all of which havevery obvious tidbits ofthe Métis culture in them,"says Jayme Menzies, fromManitoba.
"But if you asked my motherand my [grandmother] if theywere Métis, they would deny itstill. Unfortunately they grewup in a time when they wereencouraged to deny that bloodin their culture."
Read The Full Article Here
The Secret Life of Trees: TheAstonishing Science of
What Trees Feel and HowThey Communicate
Trees dominate the world's theoldest living organisms. Sincethe dawn of our species, theyhave been our silentcompanions, permeating ourmost enduring tales and neverceasing to inspire fantasticalcosmogonies. Hermann Hessecalled them "the mostpenetrating of preachers." Aforgotten seventeenth-centuryEnglish gardener wrote of howthey "speak to the mind, andtell us many things, and teachus many good lessons."
But trees might be among ourlushest metaphors andsensemaking frameworks forknowledge precisely becausethe richness of what they sayis more than metaphorical -they speak a sophisticated
our blog this month, a story of Chief Membertou's life and legend.
Read The Blog Post Here
Métis Scholarships and Bursaries for 2017
It's that time of the year again, when students are planning their educational path forthe next year. As we do every year, we have compiled a list of the Scholarships andBursaries available for Metis Students for 2017. We've created a new page on ourwebsite with the full list, as well as a downloadable PDF version. We plan to updatethis list throughout the year. If you are aware of any Scholarships or Bursaries wemight have missed, please let us know!
SEE THE FULL LIST HERE
Opportunities Lost
By: Thomas Shoniker a member of the
Painted Feather WoodllandMetis community
In our October submission, we reviewedthe evolution of the Métis. We gavecredit to the spirit and strength of ourgrandmothers who, prior to the birth ofCanada as a nation, gave birth to our culture. We also reviewed the negative effects ofcolonization on Indigenous women and the crisis that has come to be known as the 'murderedand missing' Indigenous women and girls. We praised the Trudeau government for its efforts tobridge the divide between Indigenous and non-Indigenous cultures, particularly by commissioninga $54 million inquiry to examine the social determinants that contribute to the flight of Indigenouswomen away from their communities andinto danger. Imagine our surprise when it wasannounced in the very next month of November that in fiscal 2015, Indigenous Affairs let morethan $1 billion that it was allotted to improve the lives of Indigenous women, families andcommunities go unused and unspent! One can only wonder how many opportunities forimprovement were lost, and how a federal government that has promised to improve thecondition of our Indigenous peoples could have allowed this to happen.
Read The Full Article Here
A Colouring Book For AllAges: The SevenGrandfathers Teachings
Painted Feather Woodland Metis memberGloria Hope a talented artist, using suchmediums as sculpture, visual arts,
Gloria Hope
silent language,communicating complexinformation via smell, taste,and electrical impulses. Thisfascinating secret world ofsignals is what Germanforester Peter Wohllebenexplores in The Hidden Life ofTrees: What They Feel, HowThey Communicate (publiclibrary).
Read More Here
12 Books byIndigenous WomenYou Should Read
Poetry, novels, short stories, memoirand young adult: These 12 books byCanadian Indigenous women areamazing reads.
See The List Here
Gutsy Gourmet NativeAmerican Recipes
The Gutsy Gourmet Networkdo a wonderful job ofcollecting recipes from manycountries and cultures. This isa fantastic list of NativeAmerican Classic recipes. Wehope you enjoy them!
Click Here For Recipes
Christi Belcourt
murals, as well as writing and illustration. She facilitates art and nature programsclose to home. Now, in conjunction withbest-selling Metis author of The SevenSacred Teachings and Dream Catcher,David Bouchard, she's created a Colouringbook to help teach the Seven GrandfatherTeachings.
The Seven Grandfather teachings honorthe seven gifts neccessary for living asimple, balanced life as seen through theeyes of animals. Her gorgeousillustrations will not only allow others toexpress their creativity, but to learn andgrow as they do.
Gloria says "I have walked the way of thenatural world since I was a little girl. Running barefoot with the wind, on our
hundred and fifty hectare farm. Gathering rocks, feathers and wood that spoke to me along theway. For as long as I can remember I have known, felt, and lived a deep magical connection tothe Earth. With an intuitive communication and profound reverence for all living things, I createwith the vision, tools, and materials of Mother Earth. Nature is my inspiration!"
A percentage of all of the book sales will go to the DAREarts "First Roots Program" - raisingfunds and awareness for Indigenous children in remote communities dealing with poverty,isolation, modularization and suicide.
"I was smitten when I first saw this colouring book. Not only have colouring books come intovogue, but Gloria's art and understanding of our Sacred Teachings are uniquely amazing! Toallow children the pleasure of becoming a part of the book while coming to better understand theSacred Teachings is nothing less than brilliant." says David Bouchard.
We hope everyone will support this wonderful community member, and a wonderful cause! Youcan order your own copy of The Seven Grandfather Teachings here.
Native American Woman May Have Made It to Europe 500Years Before Columbus Was Born
The first Native American to arrive in Europe may have been a woman broughtto Iceland by the Vikings more than 1,000 years ago, a study by Spanish andIcelandic researchers suggests.
The findings boost widely-accepted theories, based on Icelandic medieval textsand a reputed Viking settlement in Newfoundland in Canada, that the Vikingsreached the American continent several centuries before ChristopherColumbus traveled to the "New World.".
Spain's CSIC scientific research institute said genetic analysis of around 80people from a total of four families in Iceland showed they possess a type of
Interview: Walking WithOur Sisters
Rebeka Tabobondung interviewsChristi Belcourt for MUSKRATMagazine about the Walking withour Sisters exhibition/memorialhosted by G'zaagin Art Gallery atthe Parry Sound Museum. Theexhibition ran from January 10 to26, 2014.
Watch Full Video
10 Foods Natives HadBefore Europeans
Much confusion surroundsIndigenous foods. "Before1492, tomatoes, potatoes, wildrice, salmon, pumpkins,peanuts, bison, chocolate,vanilla, blueberries and corn,among other foods, wereunknown in Europe, Africa andAsia. Today, we think oftomatoes as an Italian staple,of potatoes as quintessentiallyIrish or northern European,and even of peanuts as nativeto Africa. But Native Americanfarmers cultivated anddeveloped these foods overhundreds of generations, longbefore Europeans exportedthem throughout the world," explains Kevin Gover(Pawnee), director of theNational Museum of theAmerican Indian SmithsonianInstitution, in the forewordfor The Mitsitam CaféCookbook: Recipes from theSmithsonian National Museumof the American Indian byexecutive chef RichardHetzler.
Read More Here
Ontario Métis FamilyRecords Center
DNA normally only found in Native Americans or East Asians.
Read The Full Story Here
Music Video - Carlos Nakai: Earth Spirit
This collection of solo flute pieces from Navajo-Ute musician R. Carlos Nakai isan evocative delight. The album consists of mostly original material, from thecomposition "Canyon Reverie," to the improvisational "In Media Res," to"Athabascan Song," an arrangement of a traditional song. The latter inparticular stands out, with a faster rhythm and more lilting melody than most ofthe other pieces. There's also "Ancient Dreams," performed on a bone whistle;the instrument almost exceeds the upper range of human hearing, and Nakaioccasionally sounds like he's imitating birdcalls. A classically trained musician,Nakai blends musical traditions to create a whole that reminds one, onoccasion, of Japanese shakuhachi music.
Watch The Video
The OMFRC would like to thank everyone that is standing with us to supportthe Ontario Metis Family Records Center Community Facebook Page.......your
response is nothing short of incredible!
Stay connected and celebrate your heritage! Share that you're a member of theOMFRC Community with your family members on Facebook. It has never been
more important to stand up and be counted!
Have you visited our Facebook page? We welcome you to join our OMFRCCommunity - we want to hear from you.
We're on the web!
See us at:
www.omfrc.org
New Submissions
Our editors are alwayslooking for originalsubmissions that would beof interest to ourcommunity. Do you know ofany upcoming events thatyou would like to sharethrough the Newsletter,Facebook, or our newwebsite?
If you have something youwould like to add to futureissues we would be happyto consider it; please call oremail us with the title"Submission" on the email. Thank you! [email protected]
1-613-332-4789