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81. Canadian Indians
CANADIAN native first NATIONS Reserve and Band info contacts, maps, Indians of North America Canadian first Nations, MANITOBA BANDS CONTACT
http://www.logoi.com/links/nativeamericans/canadian_indians.html
canadian indians
Indian Claims Commission (ICC)
"formed by Canada and First Nations as a means to accelerate the resolution of specific land claims."
Historical Overview(Canadian Indians)
"A Historical Overview (Native Canadians) By Jeff Kingswood. Did you know that when Solomon was building the temple in Jerusalem, early Woodland culture was establishing itself in what is now Eastern..."
Find in a Library: Arduous journey : Canadian Indians and...
"See which libraries own this English book! ... Arduous journey : Canadian Indians and decolonization. By: J Rick Ponting ... Canada, Indiens, Relations avec l'état., Canada, Indians of North America, Government relations ..."
Indian Lawsuits Threaten Canadian Churches
"November 2, 2000. Indian Lawsuits Threaten Canadian Churches. By JAMES BROOKE ... the end of next year, the Canadian government forecasts, 16 000 Indians will have entered some form of ... the real..."
First Nations - Canadian Heritage Gallery

Sportspic.com Canadian Born Major League Baseball Players
"Sportspic.com the most comprehensive list of Canadian Born Major League Baseball Players ... Canadian Born Baseball Players. Welcome ... focus of this page is Canadian Born Major League Baseball Players Past ... is that a player must be Canadian Born. There are a few ..."
Information about Canada FDC: 1975 Canadian Indians of the Subarctic...

82. Subject Directory Query
records retrieved 17 for subject SOCIAL STUDIES native Studies ContentSocial research links regarding the Aboriginal, first Nations,
http://www.library.pe.ca/bookmarks/subquery.asp?qs=SOCIAL STUDIES -- Native Stud

83. Native America Calling - Media Archives
native America has been torn between two distinct political realties first Nations people fear this could lead to an armed conflict if the people are
http://www.nativecalling.org/archives/list2000.html
Welcome to NAPT's Media Archives. Media Archives is a resource of Native American Public Telecommunications. Browse the topic and guest categories to listen to classic episodes of our favorite talk show in Indian Country, Native America Calling. NATIVE AMERICA CALLING ARCHIVES: 2000
TOPIC / GUEST CATEGORIES Media Archives Home TOPICS Topics 1995-1997 Topics 1998 Topics 1999 Topics 2000 Topics 2001+ Civil Rights Current Events 2001, 2000 Current Events 1999, '98, '97 Environment Economics Education Gaming History Human Rights Indian Humor International Issues Land Issues Legal Issues Media Metaphysics NCAI Native Literature '01 Native Literature '00 Native Literature '99 Native Literature '98 Native Literature before '98 Race Racism Religion GUESTS Irene Bedard (real media) JoAnn Chase President Bill Clinton Wallace Coffey (real media)

84. Web Links - History & Culture Web Sites
native Technology Pictures, Instructions, Lots of Northeast Stuff! Time Lines;mikmaq History Timeline Maine PBS Timeline native Culture
http://www.avcnet.org/ne-do-ba/web_hist.html
Last Updated 05-Nov-04

85. Canadian Aboriginal Speaker A Highlight Of Urbana 03
Ray Aldred, director of the first Nations Alliance Churches of Canada, becamethe first native North American to address an Urbana convention since 1946.
http://www.canadianchristianity.com/cgi-bin/na.cgi?nationalupdates/040129urbana

86. Educational Resources: WWW Links - Algonquian Links
Algonquian first Nations in Quebec The Abenakis, Algonquins, Atikamekw, Crees,Malecites, nativeTech native American Technology Art
http://www.qesnrecit.qc.ca/socialsciences/cycles123/elemmedfnal.html
Updated on: Tuesday, August 16, 2005 Algonquian Links Algonquian First Nations in Quebec - The Abenaki, Algonquin, Atikamekw, Cree, Malecite, Mi'kmaq (Micmac), Montagnais (Innu), and Naskapi (Innu) all form a part of the Algonquian linguistic group.
Scenes from the Eastern Woodlands
- A Virtual Tour ~ Circa 1550.
http://nativetech.org/scenes/
Algonkin History
http://www.tolatsga.org/alg.html
Storytelling - The Art of Knowledge
http://www.civilization.ca/aborig/storytel/introeng.html Utapanashku - the Innu toboggan
http://www.innu.ca/utapan.html
The Innu (also known as Montagnais-Naskapis)
http://www.heritage.nf.ca/aboriginal/innu.html
Mi'kmaq (Micmac) The Mi'kmaq (Micmac)
http://www.heritage.nf.ca/aboriginal/micmac.html Mi'kmaq Portraits Collection
http://museum.gov.ns.ca/mikmaq/index.htm
Mi'kmaq-Mi'gmaq Online Talking Dictionary Project
http://www.mikmaqonline.org/
http://collections.ic.gc.ca/objects/mi'kmaqmain.htm

87. Education - Hudson Museum, The University Of Maine
Leavitt, Robert M. Maliseet and Micmac first Nations of the Maritimes . By Spirit of the Dawn, native American Singers from Maine.
http://www.umaine.edu/hudsonmuseum/reso.php
This page uses JavaScript to change the colors of the images in the navigation menus when the mouse is moved over them.
Maine Indians: A Web Resource List for Teachers Tribal websites:
The Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians

(www.maliseets.com)
The Aroostook Band of Micmac

(www.micmac.org)
The Penobscot Nation

(www.penobscotnation.org)
Passamaquoddy Tribe at Pleasant Point

(www.wabanaki.com)
Passamaquoddy Tribe at Indian Township
(www.passamaquoddy.com) Passamaquoddy sites: The Passamaquoddy Tribe (www.quoddyloop.com/pssmqddy.htm) - Site not created by the Passamaquoddy but includes their input. Passamaquoddy Literature (www.indians.org/welker/passquat.htm) - Offers a compilation of Passamaquoddy stories and legends. Facts for Kids: Passamaquoddy Indians (www.geocities.com/bigorrin/passamaquoddy_kids.htm Some straightforward answers to the questions most often asked by children, with Passamaquoddy pictures and links. Micmac sites: Micmac History (www.dickshovel.com/mic.html) - This site offers information on Micmac (not limited to Maine Micmacs) population, language, culture and history.

88. ACS-AES Diversité Canadienne - Autochtones
indigènes ou aux peuples des Premières Nations qui habitaient la région (tout ce native languages, the first two volumes of which appeared in 1988.
http://www.acs-aec.ca/cdnDiversity/french/aboriginal/index.asp?flag=1&letter=C

89. Sept 2004
CONVOCATION The Convocation of Eagles national native American Christian many native American/ first Nations and other Indigenous peoples came together
http://www.firstnationsmonday.com/archives/news092404.htm
Sharing All Good Things With The One Who Teaches Him ... Gal 6:4
Rev Jen Goes To Washington - October 20-23, 2004
When ever I think of Washington DC, I think of that old movie from 1939 with Jimmy Stewart, "Mr. Smith Goes To Washington".
Please keep us in prayer as we raise the funds, make the travel arrangements and as we do whatever it is that our Creator and Savior has asked of us to do. We'll send a report of the rally ( and of the new National Museum of the American Indian) when we return!
For more information on the America For Jesus Rally, visit the website at: www.americaforjesus.org . For more information on the National Museum for the American Indian, visit the website at: www.AmericanIndian.si.edu .
Annual Nomee Memorial Pow-wow - October 29-31, 2004
Also ... The Bob Family will be hosting the Convocation of Eagles Gathering next year. The dates will be August 28- September 2, 2005. The meetings will be at Ross Point in Post Falls, ID. Then the church services will be at the Gateway. More information will come together when the Bob's return from Uganda, Africa!
Reports on Peru, Convocation of Eagles and More ....

90. Listening To Our Ancestors: Rebuilding Aboriginal Nations In The Face Of Environ
The Gwitch in and first Nations in the Yukon are battling toxic Defending MotherEarth native American Perspectives on Environmental Justice.
http://www.snowchange.org/snowchange/content/view/29/2/
Wednesday, 21 September 2005 Home News Indigenous Views Listening to Our Ancestors: Rebuilding Aboriginal Nations in the face of Environmental Destruction Main Menu Home News Event Calendar Discussion Forum ... Search Newsletter Keep yourself updated with our FREE newsletters now! Name E-mail Subscribe
Unsubscribe Listening to Our Ancestors: Rebuilding Aboriginal Nations in the face of Environmental Destruction Monday, 10 March 2003 Leanne Simpson (Department of Native Studies, Trent University, Canada) from the Anishinaabekwe Nation, has contributed two papers to the Snowchange process. She discusses the philosophical, ethical and methodological concerns and priorities in this essay.
Leanne Simpson
Listening to Our Ancestors: Rebuilding Aboriginal Nations in the face of Environmental Destruction
Our Elders tell us that just as it has taken 500 years to create the colonial relationship we struggle against today, it will take that long again to complete the decolonization of our minds and knowledge, to reclaim our cultures, and to reinstate our traditional systems of governance. These are necessary prerequisites for the restoration of our societies as healthy and sustainable Nations. The question is, what will be left of Mother Earth after another 500 years of exploitation to support unfettered economic and industrial growth? These struggles are not easy. Indigenous Peoples often find themselves challenging government-supported multinational corporations who exploit their territories for profit with no acknowledgment that their operations are on Indigenous lands, or that the industrial waste products they produce negatively impact local Aboriginal communities. At the same time, much of the intact wilderness Canadians enjoy is a direct result of Aboriginal Peoples' knowledge and sustainable ways of life. Issues around environmental protection and the "management" of "natural resources" cannot be resolved until the colonial relationship Canada insists on having with Indigenous Peoples is dismantled and jurisdiction over Aboriginal lands is restored in the hands and hearts of Aboriginal Peoples.

91. Festivals - Native Networks
In 1998, the festival s first year, a native American documentary program was Twentyfour films were presented at the North American first Nations Film
http://www.nativenetworks.si.edu/eng/purple/festivals.htm
What's New
Entry deadline: September 15, 2005
Festival: September 29 - October 2, 2005
Gallup Inter-Cultural Film Festival
Gallup, New Mexico

The Gallup Film Foundation announces the inaugural Gallup Inter-Cultural Film Festival: Shining Light on the Bridges Between Cultures. The festival is accepting works of all lengths, with the following categories and themes: narrative, documentary, experimental, and music video; advocacy/activism, children's/family, animation, gay/lesbian, regional, Native American, and International. It will include a selection of youth films, a panel discussion about breaking into the film industry, and musical performances. Screenings will be held at El Morro Theater. Payment of an entry fee is required for each work submitted. The Gallup Film Foundation, founded by Carrie House and Roy Howard, is dedicated to promoting the development of independent film in the Four Corners region.
For more information, go to

92. Friends Of Neoki-stom-i - A Bravenet.com Guestbook
I Was looking for native American Bone and Horn Chokers for myself,and I wound I know that my great grandfather was half Indian (firstnations people)
http://pub39.bravenet.com/guestbook/show.php?usernum=3319196226&cpv=1

93. Nova Scotia Archives & Records Management - Mi'kmaq Holdings Resource Guide - Ot
In 1989, the collections of the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI)were transferred Includes FAQ about first Nations status and how to apply
http://www.gov.ns.ca/nsarm/virtual/mikmaq/resources.asp
gov.ns.ca Tourism, Culture and Heritage NSARM Virtual Exhibits ... Mi'kmaq Holdings Resource Guide
Mi'kmaq Holdings Resource Guide
Institutional Sites with Mi'kmaq Materials: Digitized Content Mi'kmaq and Maliseet Cultural Objects , Canadian Museum of Civilization
Extensive collection of photographs of cultural objects including adornments, baskets and containers, clothing and personal items, games, tools of survival and travel technology. Mi'kmaq Portraits Collection , Nova Scotia Museum
Large collection of portraits and illustrations of the Mi'kmaq in Atlantic Canada. Early Canadiana Online (ECO)
An online digital library providing free access for the general public to over 937,800 pages of Canada's printed heritage. Search various spellings of 'Mi'kmaq' (e.g. Micmac, Mikmak) and the names of known authors of early Mi'kmaq books. National Film Board of Canada (NFB)
The NFB site contains a collection of films on the Mi'kmaq or created by or contributed to by Mi'kmaq people. Search various spellings of 'Mi'kmaq' to find these films, many of which may be viewed online, also to view related press releases and site links for most.
Community Sites with Mi'kmaq Materials: Digitized Content Miawpikek Aknutmaqn - Aosamiaji'jij Miawpukek Reserve (Conne River, Newfoundland)

94. APTN FORUMS -> Does White Guilt Help Anyone?
Do the first nations readers of this forum bear guilt for the massacre of Inuit at For a time, slave merchants continued to raid native American
http://www.aptn.ca/forums/index.php?showtopic=264

95. APTN FORUMS -> Does White Guilt Help Anyone?
first Nations peoples need to consider the ways of knowing and being that theirElders For a time, slave merchants continued to raid native American
http://www.aptn.ca/forums/index.php?showtopic=264&view=getlastpost

96. NativeBiz - Web Links
Index of native American Legal Resources on the Internet Fever Prod Videoson native North American and first Nations art, culture, and artists.
http://www.nativebiz.com/Web_Links,l_op=viewlink,cid=4.html

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97. Native Resource
At first, Fundy s native people probably assumed that the European colonists Maliseet and Micmac first Nations of the Maritimes. Robert M. Leavitt.
http://www.bofep.org/native_resource.htm
FUNDY ISSUES # AUTUMN 2003 Living Lightly on Land and Water Native People and the Bay of Fundy “Chief Membertou and his small band of Mi'kmaq could have had little inkling of the
consequences of their friendly welcome and aid to the struggling band of French colonists
who settled at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, in the summer of 1605.” Puzzle Pieces
Humans first settled the lands around the Bay of Fundy soon after the kilometres-thick ice sheets retreated towards the northwest about 12,000 years ago. Since then, the Bay and the landscape around it have changed markedly, largely as a result of fluctuations in climate and sea level. Over the millennia, plant, animal and human communities have gradually adapted themselves to the changing conditions in order to survive. This is the story of the changing relationships between the people of the Fundy region and the habitats and natural resources that have sustained them. Although All three ways of interpreting the past have flaws that may hinder our understanding. The problem with using artifacts to interpret human history is that only the most durable objects have survived the passage of time. The moist, acidic soils of the Maritimes rapidly decompose buried objects of wood, bone, bark, hide or natural fibres. All that is usually ever left of tools or weapons are the indestructible stone parts. From such sparse clues, ancient cultures and ways of life have to be reconstructed. Artifacts are usually more informative when found together at obvious places of human settlement, rather than scattered randomly about the landscape. However, the Native people of Fundy lived a mostly migratory existence, living for only short periods in seasonal encampments. The very few such sites that have been found are scattered widely in space and time, making it difficult to paint a seamless picture of human history in the area.

98. Sun Singer - Native Reference - Canada / Alaska
return to North America / Caribbean Highlights jobs, articles, and informationfor Aboriginal, first Nations, Metis and Inuit people in Canada. Health
http://www.sunsinger.org/refs/canada.php
Native Reference return to: North America / Caribbean
CANADA / ALASKA
Many of the sites listed here publish interesting and important information. However, it is not possible for us to monitor these sites and Sun Singer is not endorsing their contents or politics. This directory has been designed only as an information and link resource about the world cultures.

99. Wiconi International - Introduction - International Teams
from 146 countries about the challenges of native people in North America . As our first Nations people in the US and Canada see themselves being
http://www.wiconi.com/intro/iteams.htm
International Teams Staff I Purpose and Vision I Endorsers I International Teams I
Dancing Our Prayers - First Nations Ministry Teams Team Reports:
Peru
Europe Tibet Pakistan ... China
L to R, Terry LeBlanc (MiKmaq), Jodi Treviso (Cherokee), Tibetan guide and translator and Richard Twiss (Lakota) standing in the court yard of a Buddhist Temple in Lhasa, Tibet REMARKABLE WORLDWIDE OPPORTUNITY: Richard Twiss believes, "In modern missions, no other people group is so uniquely positioned for world evangelism, as First Nations People are today." Our Dancing Our Prayers ministry teams have repeatedly experienced this to be true in every part of the world they have gone. This is a unique time in world missions as the momentum in sending has begun to shift away from countries north of the equator to those of the south. At this same time the "indigenous wave" in world missions has emerged from tribal peoples around the world as a significant force in reaching the nations with the Gospel. BIRTH OF THE VISION: It was on Richard's first international trip in 1993 to Mongolia, that he became aware of the international recognition and fascination that exists for First Nations culture and history. On his second international trip in 1994 to Israel his awareness became a conviction. It was at that international conference in Jerusalem that he shared with prayer representatives from 146 countries about the challenges of native people in North America. As he walked into the conference room in his regalia, he was met with a prolonged standing ovation by the conferees. Afterward, several of these global leaders said they did know think there were "Red Indians" still living or certainly none that were Christians.

100. The American Lobster: Native Rights
native Rights The Aftermath of the Marshall Decision Twentyseven of the 34First Nations affected by the Marshall decision have come to agreements
http://www.parl.ns.ca/lobster/nativerights.htm
Native Rights: The Aftermath of the Marshall Decision What are Treaty Rights? Long before Europeans arrived in “Turtle Island” (North America) the Aboriginal peoples had been living in their own distinct societies with their own laws, customs and economies for thousands of years. When the British government felt the need to legitimize their settlement claims in the Americas they began to negotiate with the various indigenous nations. The results of these negotiations were treaties, contracts signed by two parties to legalize agreements between nations. When these treaties were made the indigenous peoples owned and occupied these American territories and when they entered into the agreements with the British Crown, they signed as independent nations and not as subjects of the British Crown. Had the British perceived them as subjects, the making of the treaty between the two nations would not have been necessary. In 1760 the Peace and Friendship Treaty was signed between the Mi’kmaq, Maliseet and Passamaquoddy and the British Crown.

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