The Mi'kmaq Anthology

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The Mi'kmaq Anthology Page 6

by Lesley Choyce


  19. Rituals for mourning

  While a person is dying and on the threshold of death, elders will tell the people in the room to reserve their tears until the person has passed on to the Spirit World. They feel that the dying person will have an easier time making that transition if tears are not shed. When the person has finally expired, then tears flow freely. Everyone, men included, are encouraged to cry. Elders tell us that the only thing that will help will be to cry and to cry until you cannot cry anymore. Once the tears are gone then you will have an easier time coping with death.

  20. Richness of body language

  Mi’kmaqs and Native people, in general, have the ability to use non-verbal signals to warn of danger, to signal indifference, to ridicule and to give directions. Most people know the signals since they have used them or have seen their parents use them. Some signals are universal among Native people and some are unique to a tribe. Without uttering a word, a Mi’kmaq facial expression can ridicule or express feelings and laughter will be spontaneous.

  21. Honouring ceremony for elders (Pestiewa’ltimk)

  This ceremony was celebrated in conjunction with the annual Christmas season. In the years gone by, elders were honoured during the period from Christmas Day on through to January 6 or the Feast of the Three Kings. Since the name Noel came from the Christmas day itself, all the Noels would be honoured first, followed by second day of honouring all of the Stephens since this day was also the Feast of Saint Stephen. All male members of the village or reserve would be honoured. The honoured person’s family prepared a feast for the entire community, and the community brought a gift of a cross on which a gift of a tie, shirt, or scarf might wrap around the cross. The food was abundant and it was an ideal time of year to rest from hunting. A different name was honoured each evening so eventually everyone with these names, regardless of age, had the opportunity to be honoured.

  22. Ceremony for individual accomplishment (Wi’kipaltimk)

  This honouring ceremony is intended for people of different ages to honour individual accomplishments or feats. It is performed when a young boy has made his first kill, whether animal or fish. His household prepares a feast, cooking what he has brought home for food. The entire village or neighbourhood is invited. The young boy sits at one end of the table and watches as the elders eat what he has provided. Each elder who comes in brings a small gift for the youth. The young boy does not eat but only enjoys the company and the compliments of his good hunting skills. In the contemporary sense, this ceremony is now used to honour educational accomplishments or acquiring a position.

  23. Dreams

  Our Creator advised us at our beginnings to listen to our dreams, and thus for ancient millenniums our people have been able to interpret their dreams and understand what knowledge they bring. Some dreams had no meaning while others cautioned or provided guidance. No dreams were taken for granted and each one was carefully analysed for a possible message from the Spirit World. While this is a skill fast disappearing from our Nation, it is still maintained among some of our elders. There are those who have the ability to see the meaning and content of a dream and provide valuable assistance or guidance.

  24. Ability to function in separate worlds

  In order for Native people to be happy and productive during their lifetime, they must be able to function in what is perceived as the two and sometimes three worlds. One must be productive and happy in his tribal world, but also one must also be able to accept and live harmoniously with all his brothers and sisters on the earth, including those in another society. Thus it is important then for our children to learn of other cultures and peoples, recognizing that they are not forced to be part of those environments but do so from choice. Education offers that realm of knowledge and choice. The Spirit World thus is the other realm that we must come to know, accept, and from which we seek guidance and nurturance.

  25. Customs and beliefs affecting women

  The female of Mi’kmaq society is a powerful force, well recognized among its people. She is a strong force for transmitting the values, culture and language of the people since she is the main agent of the culture. In every Mi’kmaq unit there is a strong female presence. The power of the woman and the cycles of her body are so strong, they could affect the spirits of the male so as to diminish his ability to hunt or fish. Certain customs are thus followed by women: they must not ever step over a male’s legs, or his fishing pole (smkwati), his bow and arrows, his gun, or anything else associated with hunting and fishing.

  26. Customs for visiting

  When a male elder visits a home, it is generally understood that the visit is meant for the male of the house; if a female elder visits, it is usually to see the female of the house. If a male elder visits, the wife may leave to give the elder men privacy in their conversations. The same procedure holds for a female visiting the home.

  27 Belief in a forerunner

  Elders have the ability to distinguish a forerunner from a coincidence. The message of an impending death is represented by a bird, an animal, or a peculiar incident. Some elders can even name the individual who will die because of the message they received. When the elder is visited with a forerunner, s/he will not become frightened or feel threatened. It is a very spiritual foretelling and is well-respected among our Nation.

  28. Feeding of Grandfather (Apuknajit)

  The feeding of Apuknajit is a time of giving thanks to the Spirits during the most difficult time of winter. It is a ritual which is performed on January 31. When darkness has settled, food is put out into the night preferably on an old stump or near a tree and offered to the Spirits. In days gone by, eel skins and fish heads were offered. An elder would lead the family to a stump, give thanks for surviving thus far and ask for additional assistance until spring.

  29. Behaviour modification of children

  In the past, not all children’s behaviour was corrected by modeling and metaphors. Children on certain occasions needed something more concrete than words to correct their behaviour. This is a time when the parents will ask the child to go into the bush and select his/her switch (npisoqnn). The indication at the time is that the child is going to be disciplined with it. The psychological effect in securing your own form of punishment is sometimes greater than the actual beating itself. Most of the time parents would consider your efforts and obedience in going into the bush together with a stiff lecture as sufficient for any misbehaviour, although if you had the misfortune of being switched then you would never forget the misdeed that warranted such punishment.

  30. Respect for food

  The rituals for food, food preservation and behaviour while eating are rigidly reinforced. First, food is sacred and as such we bless ourselves before we eat to give thanks and offer respect to food. Secondly, one is never allowed to play with food or throw food around. One is never permitted to sing, play games, or use any abusive language when referring to food. Food similarly is never put into fire, but always returned to nature. It is also not wasted, and each person takes only what he or she can consume.

  Mary Louise Martin

  bi-polar codes

  grey wolf

  today

  the sky blue, mauve, grey

  the dull teal waters move

  in big bunches

  toward

  shore line

  shiny crows

  step high

  into shallow water

  they reach down

  and pull out

  fresh water clam

  grey wolf

  i spy

  i love you …

  kissing a lot of frogs before a good day

  mauli crow

  she not so old

  she say

  she feel heart break today

  mauli crow

  she know

  heart ache

  when love at stake

  she say

  it ain’t

  a good day

  for heart play
<
br />   pretty wild flowers

  smile on mauli and me

  we down on our knees

  looking all around the frog pond

  singing love song

  she say kiss a lot of frogs

  good way to stay free …

  mauli and me …

  a warrior

  a warrior

  has a worthy opponent

  to live and learn from opposition

  to keep the inner balance

  a warrior

  in times of peace

  to gather

  to retreat

  to wear the sacred feathers earned

  in worlds of sacred harmonies

  a warrior

  to seek spirit guidance in prayers … in all that is related

  to open to the soft whisperings of wind’s song

  to accept the offerings of courage … wisdom … serenity

  a warrior

  to be of one with sweet solitude

  learning the language of the winged ones

  the dancing trees and falling waters

  to sing in their tongue the songs of earth mother

  a warrior

  to be of the ordinary

  to remain noble to humble beauty

  to burn the sacred smudge alone

  cleansing body mind and soul

  to slip into sleeping hours without human fears

  a warrior

  to play upon the drum

  to create heartbeat of the mother

  as one …

  En’sig no’ga’ma

  all our relations

  (1996)

  [untitled]

  i … mi’kmaq live and dream

  land of the haunting beauty of the birches

  moon … grandmother moon speaks

  pearls of cloud ones grace the night sky and surround her

  and pass her by

  her night light dances on the silver birch bark

  mi’kmaq … i live and dream

  dusty roads

  wild berries

  red earth

  alder and sweet fern bushes

  i dance … alone …

  alone … i dance

  under night skies

  for the sacred beauty and strength

  of what lives and dies

  within and all around

  at every moment of our human time

  i … mi’kmaq live and dream

  we’lalin niscum

  (1996)

  smudge

  my lodge is thick with fragrance

  cedar … sage … sweet grass

  sweet fern and pine needles

  smoke from their fires

  held in the albalone shell

  a smudge

  warming the soul and welcoming ancestral spirits

  out of the night coolness

  and into my lodge

  on my reserve

  with trust …

  (1996)

  moments to meditate upon

  to sit and mediate

  the songs of the winged ones

  in the mid of day

  the cool air

  mingled with the penetrating sun

  the rain forest awakening

  dressed in shades of green deep in emerald

  mingled and phasing the shades

  are lighter greens into yellows

  forest light belongs to shadow’s shade

  and to sit

  and to mediate the songs of the winged ones

  is sweet medicine

  is sweet medicine

  and how the soul forgets lost in human form

  and how the soul forgets

  to give thanks

  when it is an everyday occurrence

  (1996)

  grandmother moon

  in night skies

  she is ever present

  and cloud people

  surround her hoop of light

  misting a shawl

  a sacred robe

  of evening’s rainbow design …

  grandmother moon

  grandmother moon

  on this evening you are

  ghost like hoop

  your body of light

  powerful and beautiful

  there is a calm within

  we’lalin

  giver of night light …

  grandmother moon

  piercing the darkness

  of night sky land

  her sacred white hoop

  high above in visual effects

  the cloud ones blanket the star people

  and she is solo

  with a rainbow hoop

  of misted waters

  that gather around her

  she pierces the darkness

  powerful

  she creates shadows’ dance

  she is night light …

  grandmother moon

  she looks into and beyond my soul

  the lacy cedar boughs creating her shadows

  cedar ones weave design of midnight canvas

  she looks into and beyond my soul

  she a powerful sacred hoop of full light

  simplicity against the ebony blues and blacks

  of night sky land and crystal star people

  she looks into and beyond my soul

  her round face of translucent beauty and light

  quiet powers speak out in her name …

  we’lalin

  untitled

  given to me as a gift

  there is a sacred rattle

  a rain stick

  pebbles run along inside the cacti stick

  through the inverted cactus thorns

  fast and faster they move inside

  as the rattle takes life

  from the dances of sound

  oh so sacred

  from the dances of sound

  my mi’kmaq spirit laughs

  with her gentleness

  reminding me

  when once upon a time

  a time not so long ago

  of sweet falling rains

  it is good to be reminded of the weaver

  it is good to be reminded of the weaver

  yes … from day to day

  things … events are quite …

  are quite ordinary

  to look out beyond oneself

  that is what the weaver asks

  to walk amongst the cool rains

  the soft mist

  the surreal of fog

  to catch its moisture on our silken threads

  of our human life’s design

  to stand as a two legged

  underneath the standing ones

  the tall … overwhelming cedars

  or the ghost like essence of eastern birch

  haunting the dream state with much beauty

  wind all the while creating sound whispers … surround

  one forgets the ordinary …

  but strangely enough while in the midst of the standing ones

  they are dancing your spirit … we must not forget

  we are all weavers of the web

  we are much like the spiders

  producing and weaving silken threads

  patterns of great beauty in and through the standing ones

  we all belong to our earth mother’s design

  and we are no greater than the tiny ancient weaver

  and we are gifted indeed to know that we are related …

  we’lalin niscum

  (1996)

  she wonders

  she sits at a large picture window

  watching for long periods of time

  their wing span

  it appears to span the horizons

  as they soar

  and they perch around and by the ocean waters of the bay

  as she sits and looks out the large picture window she wonders

  she sits at a large picture window

  that overlooks blue waters

&n
bsp; ocean waters that are sapphire by skylight blues

  ocean waters that are greys by sky land of rain and mist

  at times … storms rage and cedars dance

  all this wild beauty before her

  as she sit looking out the picture window and wonders

  it appears to be so

  that on certain days

  the grandmothers and grandfathers of sky land

  eagles in flight

  dance upon the winds

  before her human eyes

  as she sits at a large picture window and wonders

  she herself nested in a house built high in the tree tops

  the grandfathers and grandmothers of sky land

  they appear so close

  they cry out

  in a high piercing voice not readily understood by humans

  they talk

  oh they talk

  ever so commanding in their presence

  as they move with powers

  in stillness of wind and in stormy grey skies

  grandmothers and grandfathers of sky land in flight …

  and in her human form she wonders

  as she sits at the large picture window

  inside the two legged dwelling

  she wonders why she is caged in …

  Mi’kmaq Story of Turtle Love

  There is a story jeeje (small story) that has been told and retold through all our relations (en’sig no’ga’ma). Our Grandmothers and Grandfathers of sky land whispered the story to me through sister winds. The Wind dancers sang a song of true love, blessed in sweet harmonies with the winged ones from above. It is the story of Glooscap and his peace warrior ways.

  Glooscap was the first Mi’kmaq created by the breath of the great spirit creator. He gave life to this son to fulfill the powers and gifts of bringing Mi’kmaq Territory to life. Glooscap’s first encounter was with his grandmother (ami giju). She was the soul survivor of the old worlds, very old and very wise. She knew of the encounter with her grandson and had waited for him. Glooscap always remained faithful to her and never took a wife. However, Glooscap had a very faithful and trustworthy companion that traveled the great Mi’kmaq Territories with him. Glooscap’s companion was Marten, a swimmer of the mighty waters and a four legged of the land. Marten also possessed the stealthy intelligence of his cousins, an important quality during times of coup.

 

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