the ojibwa by mckenzie issac
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A presentation on the OjibwaTRANSCRIPT
The Ojibwa The Ojibwa by Mckenzie Issacby Mckenzie Issac
The OjibwaThe OjibwaMade by mckenzie
Table of contentsTable of contents
• The people .
• Ojibwa celebrations.
• Ojibwa religion.
• Life as a Ojibwa.
• Ojibwa clothing.
• Ojibwa food.
• Tools, weapons, and defence.
The peopleThe people
• They live in wigwams.
• Trade with European settlers they got guns clothes Europeans get beaver skins.
• Live in North Dakota, part Ontario, north Michigan, north Minnesota.
• Ojibwa means “puckered”
• They migrate west.
Ojibwa womanOjibwa woman
Ojibwa celebrationsOjibwa celebrations
• Bands reunite to build summer villages.
• Had a feast for the dead which honored them.
• Feasts were mostly hosted in the spring.
• Loves playing lacrosse and gambling in the modern world.
• The first fruits were Wild rice.
Ojibwa celebrationOjibwa celebration
Ojibwa religionOjibwa religion
• Ojibwa called spirits spirit Manitous.
• They pleased them by praying and offering tobacco.
• In return they get good weather, great harvest and animals.
• They called Lake Superior ‘Kichigami’.
• Worship as a giver of life.
cultureculture
Life as a ojibwaLife as a ojibwa
• The women made food.
• The men were the strong warriors.
• Made clothes from animal hide and a sharp rock and a stick for spears.
• Clans were named by totem animals.
• A clan has up to 300 to 400 people.
Ojibwa wigwamOjibwa wigwam
Ojibwa clothingOjibwa clothing
• Made by buck skin and deer skin.
• Men wore moccasins and breech cloths.
• Women wore dresses and moccasins.
• Women made it from cloths
• Like breech cloths, moccasins and dresses
Ojibwa clothingOjibwa clothing
Ojibwa foodOjibwa food
• The Ojibwa eats lots of vegetables like corn beans and squash.
• The children gathered berries for cooking juice making and eating fresh.
• Wild rice is a important food.
• Ojibwa men gathered deer meet, birds , and fish.
• Most eat fresh food, some cook.
Ojibwa foodOjibwa food
Tools, weapons, and defense.Tools, weapons, and defense.
• Makes birch bark canoes out of stuff from the environment.
• Strong enough to get through rivers, light enough to carry.
• Bones and wood are used for fish hooks and lots of other things.
• Birch bark really important to the Ojibwa
• They used spears guns and knives for weapons.
Ojibwa weaponOjibwa weapon