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Native American Nations in The Canadian Territories (Part V)

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By Patty Inglish, MS

Canadas ambassador to Mexico, Guillermo Rishchynski, left, and Nuevo Len Gov. Jos Natividad Gonzlez unveil an Inukshuk in Monterrey in northern Mexico on October 31, 2007. (public domain)
Canadas ambassador to Mexico, Guillermo Rishchynski, left, and Nuevo Len Gov. Jos Natividad Gonzlez unveil an Inukshuk in Monterrey in northern Mexico on October 31, 2007. (public domain)

Inukshuk Dust


The People of the North

In Russia, there are those known popularly only as "The People of the North" and they are also living in the northernmost parts of Canada.

I am totally in awe of people that can survive without modern conveniences in temperatures of 75 degrees below zeor Fahrenheit. People that can survive Mother Nature at Her worst can surely survive anything and win any battle or challenge.

Some of these First Nation individuals in Canada are the Canadian Inuit ("The People") and they are related closely to the Russian Inuit and the Greenland Inuit. On the Circumpolar Map below, the "Others" are additional groups living in the Artic and these may be closely related to the Innuit.

One item that does, in fact, relate of the the Artic Peoples, whether they be Scandinavian, Russian, Asian, or First Nation, is the legend of the sunrise. In the western part of the Eastern Hemisphere, reindeer are said to pull the sum up every morning to begin a new day. As we travel eastward, the reindeer becomes a dragon that pulls up the sun each day.

All of the People of the North around the globe live by catching sea mammals, caribou, and fish for food and sales. Snow and ice Igloos are their primary winter residence, along with some wood huts. Summer reveals tents of caribou skins for housing. Dogsleds and huskiets or malamutes are used for hunting. Weapons were were first made form ivory and bones, with metals added later. In more modern areas of the Artic, the Inuit actually use snowmobiles and rifles.

Other Pages in the Series:


Flag of Nunavut(public domain)
Flag of Nunavut(public domain)

NUNAVUT means "Our Land"

This is likely the most interesting and awe-inspiring place in Canada.

Nunavut is the largest and newest (4/1/1999) of the organized territories in Canada, and home to Inuits. Baffin Island in Nunavut is Canada's largest island and home to the provincial capital of Iqaluit. The province was formed with the thought of returning land and government to the First Nation, specifically the Inuits.

Baffin Island has been home to first nation peoples for over 4,000 years, some of whom may have met visiting Norse explorers and vikings around 1,000 AD, but this is uncertain.

In Nunavut, the Inuits speak Inuktitut, Inuinnaqtun, English, and French as officially recognized languages. 85% of the people (about 23,000) call themselves Inuit, so this province is predominantly a First Nation province. The proivince covers nearly 2,000,000 square kilometers.


Inuktitut alphabet
Inuktitut alphabet

The Inukshuk

The Inikshuk picutresd in the opening phot is a tall stone landmarker that reminds us of Stonehange in a way, built of stones piled on atop another. The Inukshuk is used as a directional marker by the Inuit, because there are few landmarks to use as reference in the land of permafrost and snow.

These directional markers are important to the culture of the Inuit and they take them very seriously. They are built only with good reason and they are scrupulously maintained inorder for travelers to have reference points to guide them in the wilderness. Inukshuk means "to stand in for a person" and even looks like a man or staute of a man, pointing directions. It is important enough to take center place in the Nunavut flag.

What is an Inukshuk?

The Northwest Territories
The Northwest Territories

Northwest Territories (NT)

The Yellowknife Indians are also known as the Tatsanottine. They are Athabaskan-speaking (related to Alaska) that have lived northeast of the Great Bear and Great Slave lakes. The name Yellowknife comes from the copper knives and tools that this natuion has used in history.

Major Organized First Nations in Northwest Territories (NT)

  • Acho Dene Koe. Fort Liard NT
  • Aklavik First Nation. Aklavik, NT
  • Dene Cultural Institute. Hay River NT
  • Dene Nation. Yellowknife, NT
  • Metis Association of the Northwest Territories. Yellowknife, NT


Dawson City in the Goldrush
Dawson City in the Goldrush
Chief Isaac in the Yukon
Chief Isaac in the Yukon

Yukon Territory.

Major First Nation Bands

  • Champagne and Aishihik First Nations. Yukon Territory
  • Council for Yukon Indians.Whitehorse, Yukon Territory
  • Kaska Tribal Council.Watson Lake, Yukon Territory Y0A 1C0
  • Dease River and Yukon bands and Teslin Tlingit Counci. Teslin Yukon Territory
  • Yukon Indian Cultural Education Society.Whitehorse Yukon Territory
  • Vuntut Gwitch'in First Nation. Old Crow, Yukon Territory

The Han People

The han were displaced by the Klondike Goldrush in the 1900s. Chief Isaac of the Han led his people in the Yukon after they were displaced by the Goldrush. The band following Chief Isaac and their descendants havr recently formed a commercial arm, known as Chief Isaac, Inc. Thsi entity has legitimate shareholders, 100% of whom are all from Dawson City in the Yukon.

Land of the Midnight Sun

On June 21 every year, the summer solstice, the sun never sets at all in parts of Yukon. The "midnight sun" creates longer summer days with red and magenta skyscapes that hypnotize the onlooker.

Poet Robert W. Service

Sometimes called The Bard of the Yukon, Robert Service went with the Yukon Goldrushers and lived in a cabin in Dawson City. He wrote volumes of poetry, including an ode to the full moon that saved him out in the wilderness one cold night with it's directional glow. He wrote such famous poems as Song of the Sourdough, The Men that Don;t fit In and many others. RWS's WWI poetry was used in trauma clinics with the return home of injured Vietnam Veterans.

Acrtic First Nations in the News


Nunavut Handbook: Traveling in Canada's Arctic Nunavut Handbook: Traveling in Canada's Arctic
Price: $137.12
List Price: $21.50
Nunavut Generations: Change & Continuity in Canadian Inuit Communities Nunavut Generations: Change & Continuity in Canadian Inuit Communities
Price: $13.99
List Price: $16.50
Nunavut: Rethinking Political Culture Nunavut: Rethinking Political Culture
Price: $26.98
List Price: $32.95
Claiming Nunavut: 1971-1999 Claiming Nunavut: 1971-1999
Price: $23.98
List Price: $24.00
Nunavut: Revised (Hello Canada) Nunavut: Revised (Hello Canada)
Price: $4.88
List Price: $9.95

Comments

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Guru-C profile image

Guru-C  says:
2 years ago

Dear Patty, This history is fascinating!

MrMarmalade profile image

MrMarmalade  says:
2 years ago

a magic hub and you rate very highly with me.

All that knowledge for me

Thank you

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

GURU-C and MrMarmalade, I am happy that this work is interesting to you. It is fascinating to me! :) More to come...

jimmythejock profile image

jimmythejock  says:
2 years ago

I have just read part four and now i find part 5 ,i missed them earlier somehow lol. this is a fantastic series of hubs with a wealth of information, you have astonished me with your knowledge in this field and to know that there is even more to come is fantastic, patty if i could add you as a fan more than once you would have a thousand more fans all called jimmythejock, take care.....jimmy

teeray profile image

teeray  says:
2 years ago

Awesome article and pictures, Patty! I'm scrambling to find the other parts of this article series.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

I have the other related pages listed as links in the first text box above. lol Hpefully I have them all connected up! :)

Jimmy, thanks for being 1000 fans to me! I studied Native Americans and otehr indigenous peoples in college as part of a minor in social sciences and really enjoyed it. I keep finding more information as I go along, checking resources for updates! :)

Thank you too, teeray. Always good to hear from you!

soyelude profile image

soyelude  says:
2 years ago

Just read this hub and its quite rich in historical detail. A very educative and informative hub.Great job. Patty,are there still native red indians in America?

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Hi solyeude! It's great to hear from you again!

I also learned (in 1996) that one of the Iroquois Nation's tribal words for "cousin" is the same as that found in a Zulu language, and this is a linguistic marker for the two peoples to be rather closely related. I recall viewing pictures of both and noting that some headdresses were nearly identical among Mohawk and Zulu.

There are indeed several hundred thousand (I don't know if it's millions, but I will soon know) full-blood Native Americans in the USA. My next hubs will go from the west coast to the east coast of USA and talk about that. There are SO many nations and bands of Native Americans in California alone, that I cannot even list them in a Hub. I have had to add links to lists and commentary about them.

Thanks for reading. By the way, I am 3/8 Mohawk. One day I will take the DNA test for tribal registration, as the papers on that side of the family are not available. In fact, there is very little documentation about that side of the family. What is pretty certain is that an ancestor translated languages at the Battle of Fort Pitt.

Iðunn profile image

Iðunn  says:
2 years ago

awesome Hub~

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Thanks Iouun. Amazing culture, isn't it?

Iðunn profile image

Iðunn  says:
2 years ago

it is and a lot of this is new to me. I haven't delved much into inuit culture, yet.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

I could sit in a room with these materials for 6 months and never come out; there is so much.

Iðunn profile image

Iðunn  says:
2 years ago

I share your fascination. When I get done restoring my Hubs I know exactly whose Hubs I'm going to be spending a lot of time in. :)

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

And I will enjoy reading all of your restored hubs. Great place!

Iðunn profile image

Iðunn  says:
2 years ago

I don't know that you will enjoy them, really. :p Can't say I didn't warn you.

Seriously, unless you have a vast interest in American left politics, or Irish nationalism, they probably aren't going to fall into your interests.

You are most welcome to give them a shot, however, if you want. :)

Perhaps you might find some joy in the re-Rising of the ridiculous for-fun Frozen Sparrow Revolution.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

My great great (maybe more)  grandfather migrated from England to Ireland and then to America and wouldn't tell anyone here he had lived in Ireland because of discrimination, so I am interested in all things Ireland.

As for politics, I study all sides and listen to all platforms, but remain an independent looking for the best. My "things" on Earth are anti-abuse of all kinds, good stewardship of the planet, experimental math and physics, multiple dimensions, and raising up the Native American -- the Mohawks in Canada are a far leftest party all of there own. I like THEM --... :)

Iðunn profile image

Iðunn  says:
2 years ago

you might enjoy giving them a browse then, as you have time. I came into the fascination sideways myself via loving an individual, I'm not even Irish-American. I looked into it both sides and formed my own opinion and to me it was/is a social justice issue. underbirdz.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Interesting. I'm 3/8 Mohawk, 3/8 English with some Irish-Scottish, and 1/4 French with one German ancestor. I have everything that brought and/or suffered abuse and horror in North America in the 1600s and see it as also a social justice issue.

I'd say don't ever think about people not liking any of your poetry. Someone will and that is important. What you write may impact a life as no other thing could.

Iðunn profile image

Iðunn  says:
2 years ago

thx patty, you're a warm and considerate person. :) I think you bring a great deal to the table in hubber interaction.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Oh, wow, thanks! I am making some good friends here and I know others are. It's a positive venue overall I think.

AuraGem profile image

AuraGem  says:
2 years ago

I have just just spent quite awhiles wandering through this hub. When I visited Canada (Saskatchewan) I brought back a small souvenir Inukshuk! It has always fascinated me!

Thank you for the sheer pleasure of relaxing and learning!

Smiles and Light

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

I;ve never been to that province yet. I'm glad you enjoyed it as well as these Hubs.

William F. Torpey profile image

William F. Torpey  says:
2 years ago

More great history, Patty. Thanks for a nice trip -- even if it is a little cold up there. Inukshuk is fascinating. It reminds me a little of some stone I've seen in Colorado when I was stationed there in the Army in 1957. But I don't think I'll try to learn the language, or even the alphabet!

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
2 years ago

Thank you William! Colorado was interesting, I'll bet.

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