Sunday, December 12, 2010

DAY OF ACTION TO SUPPORT THE ALGONQUINS OF BARRIERE LAKE

DAY OF ACTION TO SUPPORT THE ALGONQUINS OF BARRIERE LAKE!
DEMAND THAT CANADA RESPECT BARRIERE LAKE'S TRADITIONAL GOVERNMENT AND TRAILBLAZING ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS

MONDAY DECEMBER 13,
MARCH STARTS AT NOON, PARLIAMENT HILL, ENDS AT THE OFFICE OF THE MINISTER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS, CONFEDERATION BUILDING (BANK AND WELLINGTON)


Supported by: Canadian Union of Postal Workers, Canadian Union of Public Employees, Public Service Alliance of Canada, Council of Canadians, KAIROS, the New Democratic Party, Green Party, Christian Peacemaker Teams, Mining Watch, Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement-Ottawa, Barriere Lake Solidarity-Toronto, Barriere Lake Solidarity-Montreal

For more info and to download flyers: www.barrierelakesolidarity.org, www.ipsmo.org

What if a foreign regime was destroying your system of government, so it could then steal your resources and prevent you from environmentally protecting your homeland? This is what the Harper Government and federal bureaucrats are doing to the First Nation of Barriere Lake.

For more than two decades, the Algonquins of Barriere Lake have been demonstrating environmental leadership to the rest of Canada, campaigning to stop destructive clear-cut logging and to implement a sustainable development plan in their homeland in north-western Quebec.

But multi-national forestry corporations and government bureaucrats have refused to honour any of the agreements signed with Barriere Lake. They have tried at every turn to undermine the small community, one of the poorest in the country, and prevent them from implementing and realizing their vision for the protection and stewardship of the forests.
The David-vs-Goliath story now has a dark new twist: the Conservative government and bureaucrats in Indian and Northern Affairs Canada are interfering in Barriere Lake’s internal affairs, using section 74 of the Indian Act to forcibly assimilate and destroy the community's traditional government -- a traditional government the community has used for countless generations and which maintains their hunting way of life and respect for the environment. 

Led by Barriere Lake youth, the overwhelming majority of the community are struggling to preserve their traditional government, so they can continue protecting the watersheds, forests, wildlife and lands for all future generations, Native and non-Native.

The Harper government is violating the Canadian Constitution, which protects the Aboriginal right to self-government. They are violating the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous peoples, even though they have now endorsed it.

Join the Algonquins of Barriere Lake on Parliament Hill as they demand the Harper government and federal bureaucrats reject the use of section 74 and respect the community's traditional government and  vision for environmental protection!


:: BACKGROUND: HOW IS THE GOVERNMENT DESTROYING BARRIERE LAKE'S TRADITIONAL GOVERNMENT? AND WHY? ::

The government has used an archaic section of the Indian Act – section 74 – to unilaterally impose a different system of government on Barriere Lake. 

Barriere Lake’s traditional government – open to community members who have connection to the land, and in which Elders guide potential leaders and safeguard their customs – ensures that community members maintain their connection to the land and their hunting way of life. The band council electoral system the Harper government has imposed destroys the sacred governance bond the community has with the land. By breaking Barriere Lake's connection to the land, the Canadian and Quebec governments hope to get away with violating trailblazing environmental agreements and with illegally clear-cutting in Barriere Lake's traditional territory.

The overwhelming majority of community members want to protect their traditional governance system, but the bureaucrats in Indian and Northern Affairs Canada are spreading the misinformation that they are only a small group.

Through the summer, the Indian and Northern Affairs Canada bureaucracy ran an illegal process, imposed by the Quebec police, to bring the new system into the community. Fewer than a dozen ballots were sent in to nominate candidates for an Indian Act Chief and Council, who where then seated by acclamation. Meanwhile, almost 200 community members had signed a resolution rejecting this process! That represents a majority of community members who are eligible to participate in their political process.

Even the acclaimed Chief resigned in protest, refusing to break ranks with the community's majority. But four rogue band councillors with no community support have been illegally making decisions on behalf of Barriere Lake ever since. Shuttled to secret meetings with forestry companies and government officials, these councilors are being used by the government to derail Barriere Lake's precedent-setting environmental agreements and to facilitate illegal clear-cut logging.

Youth in the community are leading the movement to protect their traditional government and to heal and overcome the community divisions created by the internal meddling of government bureaucrats.

They are demanding the Harper Government cancel the imposition on Barriere Lake of the section 74 Indian Act band council system and respect their right to select leaders according to their traditional system of governmen

Information pour laisser vos commentaires

Ici en bas vous trouverez les noms et courriels du président et du doyen d'arts de notre université

Président de l'université :

Allan Rock
President and Vice-Chancellor
Tabaret Hall, room 212
(613)562-5809
president@uOttawa.ca 


Doyen d'Arts:
Antoni Lewkowicz
Pav. Simard, salle113
Tél: 613-562-5705 
deanarts@uOttawa.ca

Monday, December 6, 2010

Public event: Indigenous Peoples threatened with extinction in Colombia

Last month, Colombia’s National Organization of Indigenous Peoples (ONIC) brought a devastating message to a special session of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights: at least 64 of Colombia’s 102 Indigenous Peoples are at risk of physical or cultural extinction in the face of the devastating effects of an ongoing internal armed conflict and the imposition of development projects in Indigenous lands without their free, prior and informed consent. When an Indigenous people disappears, so too does its culture, spirituality, language, ancestral knowledge and traditional practices - indeed a whole world is extinguished forever. The ONIC has launched an international campaign to respond to this emergency, and is calling “on humanity to recognise the situation of risk to Indigenous Peoples as everyone’s problem”.

Come hear two leaders of the ONIC speak about this courageous Campaign for Survival and Dignity and how you can support it.
  • Dora Tavera Riaño of the Pijao People is ONIC's Councillor for Women, Family and Generation
  • Flaminio Onogama Gutierrez of the Embera People is ONIC’s Councillor for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Human Rights and Peace

When: Wednesday December 8th at 7 PM

Where: Amnesty House, 312 Laurier East in Ottawa (between Russell and Chapel).

For more information or to get involved, contact pjkelsall@hotmail.com

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

International Human Rights Day: TALKING RIGHTS

Téléchargez le poster en format PDF (en anglais) / Download the PDF poster

Event at the Museum of Civilization

When: Friday, December 10, 2010 from 2 to 4 p.m.
Where: Canadian Museum of Civilization, 100 Laurier Street, Gatineau, Quebec
Who: Our esteemed panellists will include Todd Russell, Member of Parliament, Kate Rexe, Director of Sisters In Spirit (Native Women’s Association of Canada), and Isabel Altamirano-Jimenez, Professor at the University of Alberta

Monday, November 29, 2010

DAY OF ACTION TO SUPPORT THE ALGONQUINS OF BARRIERE LAKE

Friday, November 26, 2010
DAY OF ACTION TO SUPPORT THE ALGONQUINS OF BARRIERE LAKE

DEMAND THAT CANADA RESPECT BARRIERE LAKE'S TRADITIONAL GOVERNMENT AND TRAILBLAZING ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS

MONDAY DECEMBER 13, NOON, PARLIAMENT HILL

Click here for further information

Monday, November 22, 2010

Third World Canada Ottawa Movie Premiere

Third World Canada Ottawa Movie Premiere

Assembly of First Nations presents:

3rd World Canada Nov. 30th, 2010
Ottawa Premiere event
at the National Arts Centre

Public Screening 7:30 P.M.
Panel discussion: 8:30 P.M.

Engage with National Chief Shawn A-in-chut Atleo,
Participants in the film from remote Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug (K.I.), and
Gemini-nominee local filmmaker, Andrée Cazabon


Tickets are $18.00

Order your tickets here!

To reserve your seat and pay at the door:
(Please note: Toronto Premiere was a sell-out)
This event is an invitation to all Canadians to participate in solutions and celebrate the reconciliation movement under way

Third World Canada was recently featured in Maclean's, download the article here.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Seminar in Education

Dear Colleagues,

I invite you and your students to attend the following seminar presented by Dr. Filiberto Penados, a Belizian activist and scholar. Dr. Penados completed his PhD in New Zealand as a commonwealth scholar and then returned to Belize where he has been a key figure in combating marginalization of the indigenous people through education and community-based actions. I invite you all to check out the web site, [ http://www.tumulkinbelize.org/ ]www.tumulkinbelize.org of the alternative, community-based school Filiberto established in Belize.

I apologize for the short notice of this event, but assure you it will be well worth attending. While many of us engage with the literature and scholarship of marginalization, equity and anti-racism through our classes, research and writing, Filiberto brings lived experience of the ways in which peoples can respond to these realities.


Looking forward to seeing you there,


Ruth

Ruth G Kane, PhD
Director, Teacher Education
Faculty of Education
University of Ottawa

Friday, November 12, 2010

Mi-session


Et voila les deux présentations pour l’examen mi-session:
à lundi!


Marcelo

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Ellen Gabriel chez nous

The Oka Crisis – 20 Years Later:
Is Reconciliation Possible?
Ellen Gabriel

President, Femmes autochtones du Québec
Francine Lemay

Translator “À l’orée des bois” | “At the Wood’s Edge”
Daniel Salée

Political Science, Concordia University
Jessica Yee

Chair, National Aboriginal Youth Council, Canadian Aboriginal AIDS Network

Wednesday, November 3rd
11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Desmarais Building, room 3120

Kanehsatake 270 ans de résistance

Friday, October 15, 2010

Searching for Maisy Odjick and Shannon Alexander


Searching for  Maisy Odjick and Shannon Alexander, two young women who went missing from the Maniwaki, Quebec area in September 2008.  The search is scheduled for October 23, 2010.

Amnesty International will be providing a bus for volunteers from Ottawa to attend the search.  The bus will leave from the Amnesty International office (312 Laurier Ave East) at 8:00am and return to Ottawa around 7:00pm (volunteers should arrive at the Amnesty International office parking lot 15 minutes before departure).

This search is being organized and conducted by Search & Rescue Global 1 (http://www.sarglobal1.ca/index.htm). They recommend wearing appropriate clothing for the search (dress warmly, bring a hat, jacket and hiking boots or rubber boots. Please avoid wearing jeans or cotton).  There will be some food available, but searchers should bring a water bottle and snacks.

If you are interested in volunteering to participate in the search, and you would like to reserve a space on the bus, please contact mjacko@findmaisyandshannon.com.  We are requesting a voluntary contribution to help cover the costs of the bus.  There are only 40 spaces available, so please confirm your participation as soon as possible.


More information and instructions will be provided for those who have signed up to participate.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

10 INDIGENOUS STRUGGLES

10 INDIGENOUS STRUGGLES   
Canadian climate and environmental activists should support

A RECLAIM COLUMBUS DAY STATEMENT by CLIMATE JUSTICE MONTREAL

In 2009, Indigenous communities throughout the world called for a global mobilization “In Defence of Mother Earth” on October 12, 2010, reclaiming “Columbus Day” and transforming colonial holidays into days of action in solidarity with Indigenous peoples. Responding to this call and the demand for a day of action for ‘system change, not climate change’ issued by the global movements gathered in Copenhagen last year, Climate Justice Action has organized a day of direct action for climate justice.

With increasing droughts, floods, natural disasters and the hottest summer on record behind us, ever more Canadians are realizing the present and future peril of climate change. But our political and economic system has locked us into dependency on infinite economic growth. It produces elites whose vision is pathologically short-sighted, rarely extending beyond the next financial quarter or electoral term.

So rather than scale back, as we know we must, Canadian elites are presiding over a final stage of colonial resource pillage – a frantic grab for the dirtiest and hardest-to-extract fossil fuels and minerals in ever-harder-to-reach geographic zones.

These new mines, oil wells, pipelines, swathes of clear-cuts and hydro-dams are almost always on or near unceded and treatied Indigenous territories. These sites of extraction have thus become sites of  resistance – because living and depending on these lands, Indigenous peoples are their first and fiercest defenders. And in the face of resource depletion, biodiversity loss, and climate chaos, their struggles are taking on vital importance.

Indigenous communities are resisting because their resistance protects and embodies alternatives – for sane resource management in Haida Gwaii, for conservation of watersheds in Gwich'in, for sustainable forestry in Barriere Lake, for imagining different relationships to the land from coast to coast to coast. Where polluting and carbon-emitting projects have been halted or delayed, minimized or regulated, we can usually thank Indigenous peoples. During these struggles, they have won a unique set of tools – Supreme Court precedents, constitutional rights, and international legal instruments – that establish a framework for self-determination and land restitution in Canada.

If these political victories are implemented on the ground, this could mean the reshaping of our geography. We need to encourage and welcome it. After all, who else is proposing to set up multi-generational institutions of responsible land stewardship? Certainly not our corporations. Who else is conceiving of human and environmental welfare in terms of the next seven generations? Not our politicians. What this means is that supporting Indigenous struggles will not just pay off Canada's enormous moral and legal debt: it is also our best hope to save entire territories from endless and senseless extraction and destruction.

Where should we look for the courage and tenacity to save our burning and broken planet? Not in parliament, business chambers, or universities. You'll find it on the blockades in Grassy Narrows, where they watch-over the longest-running blockades against clear-cut logging in Canadian history; on the lakes of Big Trout Lake, where they daringly maneuver boats to prevent company planes from landing to prospect for minerals; and on the international campaign trail with Fort Chipewyan, as they shame Canada for the poisoning of their people.
   
These ten Indigenous struggles, which could easily be twenty or thirty others, are challenging the status quo of fossil-fuel addiction and resource pillage in this country. Standing up to governments and corporations, struggling for their mountains, waters and climate, Indigenous communities deserve the support of everyone who cares about the health of our planet.
As these communities battle to regain control over their lands, they struggle for us all.

::: 10 Indigenous Struggles that Canadian climate and environmental activists should support :::
Lubicon Lake (Alberta): The First Nation in northern Alberta has seen their traditional lands overrun by massive oil and gas exploitation which has destroyed their traditional lands and way of life. To protect their fragile boreal forest homeland from even greater depredation, the Lubicon have fought back to defend their land and lives by patiently building a global network of organizations and individuals to support their legal battles, boycotts, lobbying, negotiations with the Canadian government and - when all else failed - blockades. Despite 20 years of condemnation by United Nations human rights bodies, the right of the Lubicon people to maintain their culture and rebuild their society is still not respected by the federal and provincial governments and industry. They have been subject to economic sabotage and draconian internal interference. And even more destructive forms of development – including oil sands extraction – are planned for the future. www.lubicon.org/

Grassy Narrows (Ontario): Mercury contamination of their river system in the 1960s by a paper mill upstream devastated their economy, plunging the community into extreme poverty from which it has never fully recovered. After  decades of petitions, letter writing, speaking tours, environmental assessment requests, and protests failed to halt the destructive clearcut logging of their traditional territory, grassroots women and youth put their bodies on the line and blocked logging trucks passing by their community. The blockades are  the longest running in Canadian history, now in their 8th year. 3 major logging corporations have bowed to pressure and committed not to log against the wishes of the community, and logging has been suspended on Grassy Narrows territory as of July 2008. But under pressure from corporate lumber giant Weyerhaeuser, the province appears ready once again to give the green-light to logging in the fall of 2010.  The community is determined to prevent this. www.freegrassy.org

Pimicikamak (Manitoba):  Five hundred kilometres north of Winnipeg, Manitoba, the Pimicikimak Cree have been struggling against the consequences of hydro-electric damming on their lands. The dams have turned pristine rivers into power corridors, ancient lakes into holding tanks and a sacred homeland into an industrial complex. Manitoba Hydro company promised clean and green development when they and two levels of government signed a 1970s agreements with Manitoba indigenous communities. Pimicikamak is now fighting to force Manitoba Hydro to live up to its treaty commitments and to restore their lands and waters. The community is teaching us that hydro development, far from being a panacea for climate change,  harms lands and Indigenous peoples, and also destroys the boreal forest, the world's largest terrestrial carbon reservoir, causing the release of global-warming methane gas. www.pimicikamak.com/

Wet’suwet’en (British Columbia): Located near the town of Smithers in central interior British Columbia the Wet’suwet’en First Nation is currently engaged in a struggle to stop several oil and gas pipeline from being built across their traditional territory. Grassroots community organizers have taken a stance against not only the pipelines, but the entire tar sands giga-project, working in solidarity with other frontline communities and solidarity activists against “refineries, terminals, tanker traffic, and the systemic scope that is Carbon Marketing, Offsetting, and REDDS.” http://on.fb.me/bekx2K

Gwich’in (Northwest Territories): The Gwich’in, whose traditional territory overlaps with the Peel Watershed Region – a 68,000 square kilometer stretch of land near the Northeastern edge of the Yukon – are fighting mining corporations and the provincial government for total protection of their traditional territories. Mining companies currently hold over 8,400 mining permits in the watershed, five tributaries that make up North America’s largest network of mountain rivers. The Peel Watershed Planning Commission has called for 80 per cent protection that maintains grandfathered leases, but local communities are working for the full protection of their lands. http://www.thebigwild.org/act/peel

Baker Lake (Nunavut): Baker Lake, a mostly Inuit community in the Kivalliq region of Nunavut, has a long history of struggles against uranium mining and exploration.  In the late 1970s,  legal action was taken against the Canadian Government and a variety of uranium exploration companies.  In the late 1980s and early 1990s, they successfully fought against a proposal to mine uranium from the Kiggavik ore body, located on the post-calving grounds of caribou herds.  But the Aveva mining company still wants this ore, and ignoring community concerns about impacts on caribou, health and nuclear weapons development, have launched an aggressive public relations campaign. Feeling their views are not represented by the Inuit Organizations, Inuit from Baker Lake and elsewhere in Nunavut have formed Nunavummiut Makitagunarningit (Nunavummiut can rise up).

Barriere Lake (Quebec): The Algonquins of Barriere Lake continue to hunt, fish, trap, and harvest on more than 15,000 square kilometers of territory north of Ottawa in north-western Quebec, which they have sought to protect from clear-cut logging through a landmark conservation agreement. The 1991 Trilateral agreement undermines the Canadian government's Comprehensive Claims policy, which forces First Nations to extinguish their unceded title to the land in exchange for paltry sums of lands and money. For this reason, the federal and provincial governments and multinational industry have conspired to avoid implementing the agreement, instead criminalizing the community and attempting to abolish their traditional governance system. The community attributes the strength of their Algonquin language, their culture, and their protection of the land to the endurance of this own governance system, the Mitchikanibikok Anishinabe Onakinakewin. www.barrierelakesolidarity.org

Innu (Quebec/Labrador): The Innu have for years been struggling against the exploitation of minerals, hydro-power, animals, and timber on their lands, and military low-level flying exercises and bomb testing. Today, some Innu communities are facing proposed plans to build the Lower Churchill Hydro Project, which would mean the construction of two hydroelectric dams on their territory, causing vast environmental devastation. The project is slated to flood 12% of the Lower Churchill Valley,  increase mercury levels in the water, and destroy some of the most diverse wildlife habitat in Labrador – home to black bear and caribou, among other animals. Since the traditional Innu way of life is based on  hunting and fishing, this project, if not stopped, will also affect the ability of the Innu to live their lives freely and choose their own ways of living.  http://www.indigenoussolidaritymontreal.net/struggles/fep

Tsilhqot'in (British Columbia): The Tsilhqot’in people have a long history of fierce resistance and independence. In 2007, they set an important precedent in the British Columbia court by proving their aboriginal title and rights to 2,000 square kilometres of their lands, potential supplanting provincial jurisdiction over land-use planning, but the federal and provincial have ensnared them in legal appeals. Today, they are confronting a proposal for an enormous open-pit gold-copper mine on their land. The mine would turn a lake that is sacred to the Tsilhqot’in and that holds 90,000 unique rainbow trout into a tailings dump, replacing it with an artificial lake. Some community members have pledged their life to stop it. http://teztanbiny.ca/

Bear River (Nova Scotia): The First Nation has their own vision for a food and livelihood fishery, based on a long historical relationship to the natural world that is premised on respect and self-sufficiency to avoid hunger and sickness for all people.  This relationship is known in the Mi’kmaq language as “Netukulimk”.   But the commodification and privatization of the commercial fishery sector continues unabated, leaving no room for community sustainable practice and knowledge. It has become clear to Bear River that these fishing agreements serve only to integrate First Nations into a commodification process, watering down their treaty rights. Bear River has chosen not to sign any fishing agreements with the federal government, continuing instead to pursue its vision of a small scale food and livelihood fishery by aligning themselves with other local non-Indigenous fishermen who have also been impacted by privatization and commodification, and by continuing to learn and practice “netukulimk”. http://www.defendersoftheland.org/bear_river

Defenders of the Land (National): This network of First Nations in land struggle working with urbanized Indigenous people and non-Native supporters in defense of Indigenous lands and rights was founded at a historic meeting in Winnipeg from November 12-14, 2008. Defenders is the only organization of its kind in the territory known as Canada – Indigenous-led, free of government or corporate funding, and dedicated to building a fundamental movement for Indigenous self-determination and rights. They have called for a second annual Indigenous Sovereignty Week, a series of educational events and action that took place last year in two dozen cities, towns and communities, between November 21-27, 2010. www.defendersoftheland.org

-- Climate Justice Montreal is a collective of organizers and concerned people dedicated to building community resistance to the root causes of climate change --
We are part of the working committee to establish a Climate Justice Co-op. Find out more at http://climateactionmontreal.wordpress.com/www.climatejusticecoop.org

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Sisters In Spirit Vigil on Parlliament Hill


Sisters In Spirit Vigils on October 4th
October 4th is a day where we honour the lives of missing and murdered Aboriginal women and girls. The violence experienced by Aboriginal women and girls in Canada is a national tragedy. We must take the time to give thanks to the families who have inspired the SIS movement and who are our reason we all continue to demand action.

Date: Monday, October 4, 2010 - 12:00 - 15:00
Location: Parliament Hill,111 Wellington St., Ottawa, ON,Canada

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Les septs Anishinabes


Sept prophètes ont rencontré les Anishinabes. Ils sont venus au moment où les gens vivaient une vie pleine et paisible sur la côte Orientale nord de l'Amérique du Nord. Ces prophètes ont quitté les gens avec sept prédictions de ce que l'avenir apporterait. Chacune des prophéties a été appelée un feu et chaque feu a mentionné une période particulière dans l’avenir. Ainsi, les enseignements des sept prophètes sont maintenant appelés "les Sept Feux".

Le premier feu

Le premier prophète a dit aux gens, "Dans le temps du Premier Feu, la nation Anishinabe grandira et suivra le coquillage sacré de la Loge Midewiwin. La Loge Midewiwin sera le point de ralliement pour les gens et ses voies traditionnelles seront la source de beaucoup de force. Le Megis Sacré montrera le chemin vers la terre choisie par les Anishinabes. Vous devez chercher une île en forme de tortue, qui est liée avec la purification de la terre. Vous trouverez une telle île au commencement et à la fin de votre voyage. Il y aura sept points d'arrêt le long de votre recherche. Vous saurez que la terre choisie a été atteinte quand vous serez sur une terre où l'alimentation grandit sur l'eau. Si vous ne vous déplacez pas vous serez détruits."
Le deuxième feu
Le deuxième prophète a raconté aux gens : "Vous reconnaîtrez le Deuxième Feu parce qu'en ce temps-là la nation sera établie sur un grand corps d'eau. Dans cette période, le chemin du Coquillage Sacré sera perdu. Le Midewiwin perdra sa force, un garçon naîtra pour vous rediriger vers les voies traditionnelles. Il montrera le chemin aux Anishinabes pour un avenir solide. »

Le troisième feu

Le troisième prophète a expliqué aux gens. "Dans le Troisième Feu, les Anishinabes trouveront le chemin vers la terre choisie, une terre à l'ouest vers laquelle ils doivent emmener leurs familles. Ce sera la terre où l'alimentation grandit sur l'eau.

Le quatrième feu

Deux prophètes donnèrent le Quatrième Feu aux Anishinabes. Ils vinrent ensemble. Ils ont prévenu de l'arrivée de la race de la Lumière Pelée (aussi appelé la race à peau clair).
Un des prophètes a dit : « Vous reconnaîtrez ce temps par le visage que vous montrera la race des Lumières Pelées. S'ils viennent avec un visage de fraternité, alors ce sera là un temps de merveilleux changement pour les générations à venir. Ils apporteront la nouvelle connaissance et les articles en relation avec la connaissance de ce pays, de cette façon, deux nations se joindront pour faire une nation puissante. Cette nouvelle nation sera rejointe par deux autres pour que les quatre forment la nation la plus puissante d'entre toutes. Vous reconnaîtrez le visage de la fraternité si la race des Lumières Pelées vient sans arme. S'ils viennent offrant leur connaissance et leur main tendue. »
L'autre prophète a dit : « Prenez garde si la race des Lumières Pelées vient avec le visage de mort. Vous devez être prudents car le visage de fraternité et le visage de la mort se ressemblent beaucoup. S'ils viennent avec une arme ... prenez garde. S'ils viennent avec de la souffrance... Ils pourraient vous tromper. Leurs cœurs peuvent être remplis de l'avidité pour la richesse de cette terre. S'ils sont en effet vos frères, faites-le leur prouver. Ne les acceptez pas avec une confiance totale. Vous saurez qu'ils portent le visage de la mort si les rivières coulent avec du poison et si le poisson ne peut plus se nourrir. Vous les reconnaîtrez par cela. »

Le cinquième feu

Le Cinquième Prophète a dit : « Dans le temps du Cinquième Feu viendra une période de grande lutte qui prendra les vies de tous les natifs. Dans l'avertissement de ce Feu viendront des gens qui donneront une promesse de grande joie et de sauvetage. Si le peuple accepte cette promesse d'une nouvelle voie et abandonne les vieux enseignements, le combat du Cinquième Feu s'étendra sur beaucoup de générations. La promesse s'avérera être fausse. Tous ceux qui accepteront cette promesse causeront leur perte. »

Le sixième feu

Le prophète du Sixième Feu a prévenu : « Dans le temps du Sixième Feu il sera évident que la promesse du Cinquième Feu sera fausse. Ceux trompés par cette promesse éloigneront leurs enfants des enseignements des AÎNÉS, les petits-fils et les petites-filles se retourneront contre les AÎNÉS. De cette façon, les AÎNÉS perdront leur raison d'être ... ils perdront leur but dans la vie. À ce moment une nouvelle maladie viendra parmi les gens. L'équilibre de beaucoup de personnes sera brisé. La tasse de vie sera presque renversée. La tasse de vie deviendra presque la tasse de chagrin. »
Au moment de ces prédictions, bien des personnes se sont moquées des prophètes. Ils avaient alors des médicaments pour tenir loin la maladie. Ils étaient alors sains et heureux. Ceux-ci étaient ceux qui ont choisi de rester hors de la grande migration Anishinabe. Ces gens furent les premiers à être en contact avec la race de la Lumière Pelée. Ils souffriraient le plus.
Quand le Cinquième Feu arriva, une grande lutte a en effet pris la vie de tous les Natifs. La race de la Lumière Pelée a commencé une attaque militaire sur les indiens de tout le pays afin de saisir leur terre et leur indépendance. Il est maintenant clair que la fausse promesse de la fin du Cinquième Feu était le matériel et la richesse incarnée par le mode de vie de la race de la Lumière Pelée. Ceux qui ont abandonné les voies ancestrales et ont accepté cette nouvelle promesse ont joué un grand rôle dans la destruction des Natifs de cette terre.
Quand le temps du Sixième Feu est venu, les mots du prophète ont sonné juste sur les enfants éloignés des enseignements des AÎNÉS. L'ère de scolariser afin "de civiliser" les Enfants indiens avait commencé. La langue indienne et la religion ont été cachées aux enfants. Les gens ont commencé à mourir jeune ... ils avaient perdu leur volonté de vivre et leur but dans la vie.
Dans la confusion du Sixième Feu, il est dit qu'un groupe de visionnaires est venu parmi les Anishinabes. Ils ont réuni tous les prêtres de la Loge du Midewiwin. Ils leur ont dit que la Voie du Midewiwin était en danger. Ils ont réuni tous les paquets sacrés, tous les rouleaux qui ont enregistré les cérémonies. Toutes ces choses ont été placées dans le creux d'un rondin de l'arbre au Bois en fer. Les hommes sont descendus sur une falaise tenus par les longues cordes. Ils ont creusé un trou dans la falaise et ont enterré le rondin où personne ne pourrait le trouver. Ainsi les enseignements des AÎNÉS ont été cachés hors de vue, mais non de la mémoire. Il a été dit que lorsque le temps serait venu pour les indiens de pratiquer leur religion sans crainte, un petit garçon rêverait de l'endroit où se trouve le rondin du Bois en fer, plein des Paquets Sacrés et des Rouleaux. Il mènerait le peuple à la cachette.

Le septième feu

Le Septième Prophète qui est venu il y a longtemps dit des choses différentes des autres prophètes. Il était jeune et avait une lumière étrange dans les yeux. Il a dit : "Dans le temps du Septième Feu, les Nouveaux Gens apparaîtront. Ils retrouveront la voie de ce qui a été abandonné en chemin. Leurs pas rejoindront les AÎNÉS à qui ils demanderont de les guider dans leur voyage. Mais beaucoup d’AÎNÉS s'endormiront. Ils se réveilleront à ce nouveau temps sans rien à offrir. Certains des AÎNÉS resteront silencieux par peur. D'autres seront silencieux parce que personne ne le leur demandera. Les Nouveaux Gens devront être prudents sur la manière de s'approcher des AÎNÉS. La tâche des Nouveaux Gens ne sera pas facile.
Si les Nouveaux Gens restent forts dans leur Recherche, le Tambour D'eau de la Loge du Midewiwin fera de nouveau résonner sa voix. Il y aura une Renaissance de la Nation Anishinabe et un attisement des vieilles flammes. Le Feu Sacré sera de nouveau allumé.
C'est à ce moment que la race de la Lumière Pelée devra choisir entre deux voies. S'ils choisissent la route juste, alors le Septième Feu allumera le Huitième et dernier Feu, un Feu éternel de paix, d'amour, de fraternité et de solidarité féminine. Si la race de la Lumière Pelée fait le mauvais choix, la destruction qu'ils ont apportée avec eux dans ce pays leur reviendra et causera beaucoup de souffrance et la mort aux gens de toute la Terre.
Les gens du Milieu Traditionnel d'autres Nations ont interprété les deux routes qui se présentent à la race de la Lumière Pelée comme la route vers la technologie et celle vers la spiritualité. Ils estiment que la route vers la technologie représente une continuité de l'essor irréfléchi vers le développement technologique. C'est la route qu'a choisie la société moderne, qui a endommagé et desséché la Terre. Ce pourrait-il que la route vers la technologie représente un chemin vers la destruction ? La route vers la Spiritualité représente un voyage plus lent que les Natifs traditionnels ont entrepris et recherchent maintenant de nouveau. La Terre n'est pas asséchée sur ce chemin. L'herbe grandit toujours là.
Le prophète du Quatrième Feu a parlé d'un temps où "deux Nations se joindront pour faire une Nation Puissante". Il parlait de l'arrivée de la race de la Lumière Pelée et du visage de fraternité que le Frère de la Lumière Pelée pourrait avoir. C'est évident dans l'histoire de ce pays que ce n'était pas ce visage que cette race a porté dans l'ensemble. Que la Nation Puissante citée dans le Quatrième Feu n'ait jamais été formée.
Si les Gens proches de la Terre pouvaient juste porter le visage de la fraternité, nous pourrions être capables de délivrer notre société de la route vers la destruction. Pourrions-nous faire en sorte que les deux routes qui représentent aujourd'hui deux vues heurtantes du monde se rejoignent pour former une Nation puissante ? Une Nation pourrait-elle être guidée par le respect pour tous les êtres vivants ? Est-ce que nous sommes les Nouveaux Gens du Septième Feu ?

Extrait de la prophétie des Sept Feux des Anishnabés, inscrite sur l'ancienne ceinture de Wampum. Conservée sous la garde du Grand-père William Commanda, nommé chef des Indiens d'Amérique en 1957 et fondateur du Cercle de Toutes les Nations.

"Le temps est venu d'allumer le huitième Feu"
Grand-père William Commanda