In This Issue: Native American Student Proves Traditional Chokecherry Pudding is Medicine – How to be Healthy with Native American Remedies – Proposed Citizenship Oath Change Prompts Some To Call for More Education About Indigenous People – Hurricane Irma Unearths Historical Dugout Canoe in Indian River in Brevard – Delicious Indigenous Recipes – Burn a Bay Leaf In Your House. The Reason? You’ll be Amazed – 5 Reasons Natives Have Lustrous Locks: Ancient Indigenous Hair Remedies- “A real agent of change’; Former senator Thelma Chalifoux remembered at Metis Wake – History Matters: Treaty Six promises were quickly broken – An Indigenous Woman’s View of the National Gallery of Canada – Montreal adds Iroquois symbol to flag, strips British general of street name – HIstory, science, and the ‘Year of Two Winters’; uncovering the secrets of Dene migration – Ancient Pottery Reveals Insights on Iroquoian Population’s Power in the 16th Century – On the Blog: Cultural Safety Training Manual – The Story of How the Chicken Dance Came to the Blackfoot people – Seven Sacred Grandfather Teachings
Most Recent Posts
- The Great Upheaval of Acadia December 1, 2018
- An Essay On One Man’s Metis Identity October 18, 2018
- Community Spotlight: Karen Russell September 1, 2018
- The Festival of Saint John and St John’s Wort (Hypericum Perforatum) June 29, 2018
- A Conversation with Metis Sculptor Ernie Fauvelle June 28, 2018
- Community Spotlight: Monica Alexander June 28, 2018
- Community Spotlight: William Buchholtz (Pukinaage Makwa – Conquering Bear) June 28, 2018
- Laura Secord and the Natives – Heroes of Canada May 31, 2018
- The National Museum of the American Indian, Washington, D.C. May 31, 2018
- Anne Mouflet and Jacques Rene Tsiheme – A Brave Couple in a Harsh Time May 4, 2018
- The Life And Times of Catherine Annennontak March 31, 2018
- Blankets, Beads and Birch Bark; The “Quintessential” Eessentials of Early Metis History” March 28, 2018