ebook img

The Ojibwa Indians of Parry Island, Their Social and Religious Life PDF

126 Pages·1935·16.305 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview The Ojibwa Indians of Parry Island, Their Social and Religious Life

Oct 5 1959 i CANADA DEPARTMENT OF MINES Hon. T. A. Crerar, Minister; Charles Camsell, Deputy Minister NATIONAL MUSEUM OF CANADA W. H. Collins, Acting Director BULLETIN No, 78 Anthropological Series, No. 17 The Ojibwa Indians of Parry Island, Their Social and Religious Life BY Diamond Jenness OTTAWA PATENAUDE, J. O. I.S.O. PRINTER TO THE KING’S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTfY 1935 Price 25 cents , CANADA DEPARTMENT OF MINES Hon. T. A. Crerar, Minister; Charles Camsell, Deputy Minister NATIONAL MUSEUM OF CANADA W. H. Collins, Acting Director BULLETIN No. 78 Anthropological Series, No. 17 The Ojibwa Indians of Parry Island, Their Social and Religious Life BY Diamond Jenness LIBRARY •'v-,. NATIONAL MUSEUM OF CANAJQlA PATENAUDE, J. 0. I.S.O. PRINTER TO THE KING’S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY 1935 Price 25 cents , * CONTENTS Page Preface v CHAPTER I Social organization 1 CHAPTER II Economic life 10 CHAPTER III Man and nature 18 CHAPTER IV Beings of the supernatural world 29 CHAPTER V Man's contact with the supernatural world 47 CHAPTER VI Medicine-men and their practices 60 CHAPTER VII The grand medicine society 69 CHAPTER VIII Taboos, medicines, and witchcraft 79 CHAPTER IX The cycle of life and death 90 Appendix 112 —H 4294 PREFACE • * ,.*.>• , ‘ This report on the Social and Religious Life of the Parry Island Indians is the product of seven weeks’ investigation on that island during the summer of 1929. The principal Indians consulted were: Francis Pegahmagabow: an Ojibwa of about thirty-seven years of age, apparently full-blood, whose father and grandfather had been chiefs at Parry island. His father died when he was a child, and he was raised by a relative at Shawanaga reserve, 18 miles farther north, but later attended a school in Parry Sound. He enlisted in a local battalion at the beginning of the Great War and served until the armistice, winning the military medal, with two bars, and other decora- tions. During the two years preceding the war, and for two years afterwards, he cruised around the Great Lakes as a seaman on a vessel belonging to the Department of Marine and Fisheries that was inspecting the lighthouses, and during this period he came into contact with other Ojibwa bands. Being of profoundly meditative temperament, he began to write down the lore of his people, but later lost the notebooks in which he had jotted down their customs and traditions. He was elected chief of the Parry Island Indians after he returned from the war and held the position for two years, when he stirred up some opposition by urging the old men and women to narrate in the council house the earlier customs of the people. Although comparatively young, and more travelled than most of the Indians, he was more saturated with their former outlook on life than the majority and more capable of interpreting the old beliefs. Occasionally his interpretations may have been a little more advanced than the average Indian would have given, yet they were a logical development of the lay beliefs such as were possible to any philo- sophically minded Ojibwa before the coming of Europeans. John Manatuwaba: also an Ojibwa, native to Parry island, about seventy years of age and apparently full-blood. Jonas King: a Potawatomi Indian whose grandfather, a French-Canadian half-breed, had fought in the war of 1812, and had then led a band of his tribesmen into Canada, where they settled in the neighbourhood of lake Simcoe. Later they moved to Christian island, and about fifty-five years ago some of them moved again to Parry island. Jonas himself was bom at Angus, near Barrie, but resided on Parry island from his youth upward. He was a frank pagan, very keen and active, although in 1929 he was over eighty years old. He and his cousin, Tom King, a man of about fifty-five years, were the only surviving Indians on the island who had been initiated into the Midewiwin or VI Grand Medicine Society. Both of them had participated in a celebra- tion held on Parry island about fifty years ago. Tom King was known to most of the whites in the vicinity as the Indian medicine-man. Jim Nanibush: an Ottawa Indian born in the United States, although his parents moved to Parry island when he was five years old. He was said to be the oldest Indian on the reserve, possibly about ninety, but still very active and in possession of all his faculties. Mary Sugedub: a woman of about fifty years of age, crippled since child- hood and in consequence unmarried. It was understood that she was an Ojibwa, native to Parry island. James Walker: a man of about seventy-five years of age, born, it was understood, on Parry island. He knew comparatively little about the old customs of his people, for all his life he had tried to adopt European habits. , THE OJIBWA INDIANS OF PARRY ISLAND, THEIR SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS LIFE CHAPTER I SOCIAL ORGANIZATION The Ojibwa of Georgian bay appear to have no name for the whole of Parry island, but call that part of it that has been converted into W an Indian reserve Wasoksing and its inhabitants asoksivmnini. The present population numbers ab,out two hundred and fifty, of whom nearly a hundred consider themselves Potawatomi Indians, descendants of some bands that migrated to Canada over a hundred years ago from Michigan. Many of their relatives still reside on Christian island, 30 miles to the south, but a number of families moved north to Parry island around the year 1865. The Ottawa tribe has a few representatives on the island, but the majority of the inhabitants call themselves simply Djibive, i.e. Ojibwa, although some of them state that their original name was Kitchibuan, “ Great Medicine Men.” There are two groups among them, families that migrated recently from farther north and west, and older families who consider themselves the earliest inhabitants of the district. Since this part of Georgian bay belonged to the Ottawa tribe when the French first penetrated to the Great Lakes in the seventeenth century, the older group also must have migrated from the west within the historical period, and in fact it still preserves a tradition of its western origin as follows: Originally the Indians all came from another part of the earth in the west. They came in bands one behind another at intervals of two or three weeks, following the leadership of a man who had received a ble&sing from the 'Great Spirit. During the journey the leader placed his boy inside a stump to gain a blessing from some manido or spirit; other Indians placed their children in specially built huts. One night a girl received a vision that instructed her to bid her people move camp on a certain day and travel in a certain direction, when they would reach a great expanse of water. If they built boats there and paddled out, the Great Spirit would guide them quickly to a new land1 on the other side.” Partly through their earlier wanderings, partly through education and travel, the Parry Island Indians are acquainted with several surrounding tribes. The Cree Indians in the north they call nokmitchini “ Inland people,” and they have heard that beyond the Cree dwell Eskimo, aishime “Eaters of raw food.” To the east they have met Algonkins, whom some call seshkwagami “People of the bog land,” others yaskwagami or dask- wagami “Musk-rat people.” They know that the hated Mohawks, nodawe “People who pursue in canoes,” still linger to the southward, and that the Menomini “Rice people,” live at the bottom of lake Huron, in the territory of the United States. In the west they have heard of the Rlackfoot, whose name they translate as makadeuzide “Black sole of foot”; and some of their forefathers encountered and acquired medicine power from the Assini- boine, sinebuan “Stone medicine-men.” , The entire population of the island constituted a single band (kwinoak) nominally governed by a chief (ogimma). Now that they are confined to the reserve, and the position carries little authority, the Indians elect their chief annually; but formerly he held his position for life, and in the usual course of events was succeeded by one of his sons, generally the eldest. His power depended on his character and ability; an unpopular chief often wielded less influence than one of the medicine-men, and at his death the band might follow the leadership of another family, preferably one that was closely related. As his powers were limited, so his duties too were not onerous. He was expected to take the initiative in all public matters, to receive delegations from neighbouring bands or tribes, and to summon and preside over council meetings of all the adult hunters of his band, or of such families as were directly concerned in the matter at issue. He had no means of enforcing his wishes unless the principal men in the band endorsed them and the remainder were content to acquiesce. Council meetings were held out of doors in summer; but in winter, when th—e band scattered into small groups, the chief often erected a large wi—gwam using for corner posts, sometimes, two large trees cut off at the tops that would not only house his immediate family, but enable him to entertain the other households in his group. The people demanded from their chiefs liberality above all things. If a family were in need the chief had to provide for it from his own resources, as well as levy contributions from other families in the band and in times of plenty he maintained his popularity and prestige ; by a bountiful distribution of the fish and game that he secured through his own exertions. “ Every spring my father sent my brothers and myself to gather crayfish enough to till two quart pails. Using these as bait he fished all one night, and in the morning bade the official messenger of our band divide up his catch among the different families of our group. In the autumn he cut a lane through the ripe fields of wild rice and shot large numbers of ducks that came to settle there; these too he distributed among our group” (James Walker). The chief naturally assumed the command when the entire body of hunters went on the warpath; but this happened apparently only in times of extreme danger, as when an invasion of the Iroquois imperilled the lives of all the community. More often all the bands of Ojibwa within a certain area contributed a number of volunteers to a combined expedition, and each selected a leader meyosi for its own contingent. One old Indian, ( ) Jim Nanibush, stated that before its departure the contingent held a dance lasting four days and four nights, and that the chief of the band, the medicine-men, and the warriors chose the leader at its conclusion. Another informant, Pegahmagabow, said that the medicine-men sometimes appointed the leader; the Great Spirit, they would declare, had ordained that a cer- tain man should lead the warriors into battle. The region has not been troubled by wars for over a century, and the memories of the Indians have grown dim in the interval. Probably there were different ways of selecting a war-leader according to circumstances. Certainly a pusillanimous or inefficient chief would obtain few followers, whereas the Indians would voluntarily follow a warrior who had distinguished himself on previous occasions.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.