Lake Superior Our Helper
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- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
Fishing has been an essential element of Batchewana's sustenance, identity, and livelihood from time immemorial.
Beyond food, the Anishinabek and Ojibwe People of the Great Lakes region have a long established set of practices, lifestyles, and governance structures that are deeply integrated into cultures and communities. The arrival of Europeans and the eventual establishment of the colonial state violently disrupted Indigenous ways of being. However, Indigenous people have persisted. This has included court battles to protect inherent rights and active participation in traditional fishing activities despite ongoing and often violent state suppression.
Today, Batchewana operates the largest and most successful fishery on the Canadian side of Lake Superior.
This includes 27 captains and their crews that depend on the fisheries for sustenance as well as sales to local processing plants, restaurants, shops, and farmers' markets across the region. Batchewana fisheries have adopted a range of new technologies and techniques while embedded in Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) and in alignment with oral teachings.
To this day, the People of Batchewana continue to fish as part of an inherited obligation to all of Creation, with caring for the fisheries part of their responsibility
The narrative arc of the film follows Chief Sayers through a series of discussions with community members that explore the underlying social and ecological approaches of Batchewana's fisheries as well as perspectives about its history, current practices, and future directions. This includes ways that fishing had changed over time, stories that shaped the community, the land and the watershed, conflicts with the state around management and regulation, principles of Indigenous law and governance, as well as the culture and ceremony that are deeply embedded within fishing traditions. 12 community members including Elders, Knowledge Keepers, youth, fishers, and community leaders are featured in the film sharing their stories, knowledge, teachings, and experiences pertaining to Batchewana's fisheries.
Citation
Main credits
Furlotte, Sarah (film director)
Sayers, Dean (film producer)
Levkoe, Charles Z. (film producer)
Lowitt, Kristen (film producer)
Other credits
Cinematography, Sarah Furlotte; editor, Sarah Furlotte.
Distributor subjects
Indigenous Peoples; Environment; Clean WaterKeywords
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(water lapping)
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- [Narrator] Many, many years ago,
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thousands of years ago,
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tens of thousands of years ago,
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when time didn't matter,
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time was not a factor to our people,
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we were close to Gitchi
Manitou, the Creator.
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Anishinaabe learnt and
was given and was gifted
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the gift of love, the gift
of kindness, humility, truth.
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And when they were close to the Creator,
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close to Gitchi Manitou,
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and it come time for
him to tell Anishinaabe,
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"You have to go,
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you have a road to have a
responsibility out there."
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Anishinaabe, he had a hard time to leave,
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because he didn't wanna leave
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all those beautiful feelings that he had
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of love and kindness and caring and truth.
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Four times he had stopped,
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and each time the Creator said,
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"You have to go.
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I'll put something here for you
but you have to go further."
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At that eighth time where he stopped
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to turn around and looked,
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he couldn't see the Creator.
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He had come so far.
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And what he put there
at the end of that road
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was a very beautiful woman,
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and that very beautiful
woman was shkekimikwe,
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or namamalki, Mother Earth.
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And he put that Anishinaabe down
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onto what we call Turtle Island.
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You have a family here.
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This is a part of your being.
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This is a part of you.
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This is your mother.
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She is as much of a part of
you as the trees are to you,
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as the animals are to you.
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The birds, the fish, the medicines.
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All that surrounds you is your relations.
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That's all your family.
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And part of that responsibility
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is to take care of your family,
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take care and show your family
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that respect and that
kindness and that love
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and all that you learned
when you were at the Creator.
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(Dean speaking Ojibwe)
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- Good morning, I'm Dean Sayers.
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I'm the chief of Batchewana First Nation.
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I'm Ojibwe from the Crane Clan.
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We were placed here by the creator,
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and we really took
serious our inheritance.
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And we've been looking after
the fishery ever since.
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I'm really looking forward
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to sharing some of the insights today.
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Maybe we'll even get out on the lake.
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That would be really great
to have you guys join us
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as we venture out into our villages here
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in the eastern side of Lake Superior.
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(traditional drum music)
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(singer chanting in Ojibwe)
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We had territory that we looked after
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that was part of our inheritance.
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And the dominant clan in
this area, our governance,
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our social structures is the Crane Clan.
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So the Crane Clan, the crane
instructed us to fly around
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and find the area that we
were gonna take care of
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and look after.
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We chose Baawaating or Sault Ste. Marie
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and all the land on Eastern Lake Superior
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up to an area called Packasaw,
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inland to the Haida land
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where the water flows into Lake Superior.
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(Harvey speaking in Ojibwe)
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- So I know our people have
always fished commercially,
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boating as they known it
before in the past and today.
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But our people have
been coming here forever
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because of that whitefish at the rapids.
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It became a regular meeting area.
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People would come from all
over, Anishinaabe people.
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(Vernon speaking in Ojibwe)
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- I just wanted to
introduce myself that way.
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That's the way I was taught
how to introduce myself.
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My English name is Vernon, Vernon Syrette.
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This (speaking in Ojibwe),
this area was just
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a magnet area for people
to come in and trade.
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They would trade with the
Ottawa people, the Odawa people,
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the Potawatomi people, the
people of the Three Fires,
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they would trade with Iroquois people.
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They would trade with the
people at Wall Pool Island,
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Lake Superior, and trade
their fish for goods.
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- A lot of our people
still live that life.
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They gather medicines, they make medicine.
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A lot of our people are still traditional
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and it's been that way
since time immemorial.
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- The people at Batchewana also had
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a management system in
place, is what they observed.
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When they went down to trade
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with the people down in Mackinac Straits
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and Mackinac Island, families would trade
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and come to this area
and some of our people
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would go and live in that area
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for maybe a season of the fishery,
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just to monitor the fishery,
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to see and try and ensure
and let people know
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not to take too much of the resource.
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- Well, I growed up in
valley in Batchewana.
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It was a fishing village, eh.
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Everybody fished there.
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Everybody fished.
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Everybody, all the elders.
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So my grandfathers and everybody else.
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As I remember growing up,
I used to go with my dad.
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We didn't have the boats they have today.
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We had to row, row out there,
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out to the lake, set nets,
and go out and pull them.
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- The newcomers that were
coming into the country
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depended on that as well.
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They came to Batchewana,
people, for the fishery
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and 850 barrels of fish,
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400 barrels in one day of fish
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were supplied to the
people, to the newcomers
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who were then selling it down in Detroit
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and different areas.
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So they came and they
depended on Batchewana people
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to supply to meet their demand.
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- That's what we do in the building.
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Everybody fished, you know,
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to maintain what we had
to eat and everything.
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Sometimes we trade the
fish to get what we need.
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Sometimes we sell it.
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And that's how they did in the village.
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- And as the settler governments came in
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and seeing that resource
benefit the people of Batchewana
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by way of trade and by way of commerce,
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they began to try and monopolize it.
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(water rushing)
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(wood splitting)
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- [Dean] There are movements
on the part of Canada right now
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that will reduce our nation
to nation relationship,
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whereas they want to
place our relationship
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as indigenous people
under Canadian legislation
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and fall under part of
Canada's constitution.
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And I think the intent is good,
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but when you look at how
Canada does business,
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Anishinaabe law doesn't change.
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- And that smoke from the
fire go right up to the sky.
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To the Creator.
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- [Dean] Our law don't change.
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It's always the same.
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Natural law doesn't change
and it's all intertwined.
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Every fall, the whitefish will spawn.
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We can't make a law and change that.
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Canadian law changes depending
on who's in government,
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whether it's a conservative government
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or a liberal government,
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which law today may not be law tomorrow,
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and if we put ourself
under that constitution,
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we're jeopardizing our
inherited obligations
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and inherent rights.
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(pipe whistles)
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- When the Indians went fishing,
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they always talked to Mizhibozhoo.
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He's the caretaker of Lake Superior.
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Mizhibozhoo always helped the Indians,
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especially when they
were out there fishing.
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Because the Indian always fish.
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Always.
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(singer chanting)
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(Irene speaking in Ojibwe)
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White Sky Woman, that's my name.
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When they baptized me,
they baptized me Irene.
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I would like to stay on this
land, (speaking in Ojibwe).
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I would like to stay
here until I'm a hundred.
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Yeah, the frog.
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Yeah, I remember that.
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When me and my dad, all of
us, we go across the lake
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and we go and see Mukee
Waabkoong Nimoyaah.
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She was sitting there.
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We'd go there, put tobacco there.
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(speaking in Ojibwe) she'd say.
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Come on and see me.
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I don't know where she is today,
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but she is not there no more.
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- There was a war between
French and the English,
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the war of the plains of Abraham.
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And they eventually came here, the British
00:12:00.600 --> 00:12:05.520
more of a "we won the war and
we're gonna claim this now
00:12:05.520 --> 00:12:06.810
for the crown."
00:12:06.810 --> 00:12:09.530
And we said, "well, this
was never the crown's land,
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and it's not your land.
00:12:10.740 --> 00:12:11.730
This is our land."
00:12:11.730 --> 00:12:13.950
There was actually a royal proclamation
00:12:13.950 --> 00:12:15.750
that was made around that time.
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We allied with the British.
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The British promised us
that they would protect
00:12:21.350 --> 00:12:25.650
our language, our land,
our law, our spirituality.
00:12:27.150 --> 00:12:31.050
And 1763, they said, "this is your land.
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We know that all around the Great Lakes,
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it's your land and we're gonna
protect that land with you,
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for you, protect everything
that it is about your nation.
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We're gonna work with you."
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- My name is Mariam Agawa, Mariam Agawa.
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I was from the McKay family.
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And if we're talking about
the fishermen that were here,
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this was the main work around here,
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employment, I guess you'd say.
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It was logging and it was fishing.
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My dad, he fished from Gros Cap
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all the way up to Otter
Head, my dad fished.
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- [Narrator] And we'd
move with the fish too,
00:13:25.140 --> 00:13:27.960
so that we would fish
at certain times of year
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in certain areas.
00:13:29.340 --> 00:13:33.120
So you just didn't wander
around out there aimlessly
00:13:33.120 --> 00:13:36.510
and just put a net anywhere,
there was a science to it.
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When, how, where size of the mesh,
00:13:39.080 --> 00:13:41.080
and you'll hear that with the fisherman.
00:13:42.060 --> 00:13:45.100
- Okay, my name is Percy Thomas Agawa,
00:13:45.100 --> 00:13:47.640
my Anishinaabe name is
(speaking in Ojibwe)
00:13:47.640 --> 00:13:49.830
and I live Goulais Bay Mission.
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I am a fisherman.
00:13:50.730 --> 00:13:53.910
I do many things, but
fishing is one of them.
00:13:53.910 --> 00:13:57.000
I have seven children.
00:13:58.500 --> 00:14:00.510
I have I don't know
how many grandchildren.
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If I said 16 I could be lying,
00:14:02.700 --> 00:14:05.760
but then you wouldn't know, so I got 16.
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Going back to my childhood,
I had grandparents,
00:14:10.650 --> 00:14:14.270
of course, the grandparents
have older, older friends
00:14:14.270 --> 00:14:19.270
like themselves and they
used to set nets here
00:14:19.890 --> 00:14:23.070
in Goulais right out from the beach,
00:14:23.070 --> 00:14:25.770
maybe 40, 50 feet of water.
00:14:25.770 --> 00:14:27.270
So if you had a house full of kids,
00:14:27.270 --> 00:14:28.920
they'd come and ask if
the kids could come,
00:14:28.920 --> 00:14:31.830
give them a hand, and
they'd chopped the hole
00:14:31.830 --> 00:14:33.690
because they were very sensitive.
00:14:33.690 --> 00:14:35.110
They don't want you to chop the line,
00:14:35.110 --> 00:14:36.240
'cause they're gonna lose their net.
00:14:36.240 --> 00:14:38.340
They get that done, then
they pull the net in,
00:14:38.340 --> 00:14:40.290
and you take the fish out.
00:14:40.290 --> 00:14:41.370
And when they're done taking the fish out,
00:14:41.370 --> 00:14:43.410
they put the net back in.
00:14:43.410 --> 00:14:46.560
And at that time, that
was just for consumption.
00:14:46.560 --> 00:14:50.520
And so our pay for that whole day's work
00:14:50.520 --> 00:14:52.920
would be maybe a dozen herring.
00:14:52.920 --> 00:14:54.600
But I mean, there was something back then,
00:14:54.600 --> 00:14:59.340
you know, you take it home
and everybody had a meal.
00:14:59.340 --> 00:15:01.000
And my mother would always say,
00:15:01.000 --> 00:15:03.200
"here's what my men got.
00:15:03.200 --> 00:15:05.100
You're having supper.
00:15:05.100 --> 00:15:06.690
That's their pay."
00:15:06.690 --> 00:15:08.960
You know, and we were
always proud of that, eh?
00:15:09.900 --> 00:15:12.840
- I have a picture of my dad here.
00:15:14.520 --> 00:15:18.960
Him and Frankie Dagle is
standing on the government dock,
00:15:18.960 --> 00:15:20.970
but this is in Otter Head.
00:15:20.970 --> 00:15:25.970
That's where they men nets,
had ice stored in that shed.
00:15:27.810 --> 00:15:30.150
But they fished up there.
00:15:30.150 --> 00:15:35.130
And we used to go from here
and we'd go up the lake.
00:15:36.570 --> 00:15:39.760
I remember my dad fishing trout
00:15:40.770 --> 00:15:45.420
and he's always looking for
a gravel bed to fish trout.
00:15:45.420 --> 00:15:49.860
And they would catch,
they'd set their nets there,
00:15:51.000 --> 00:15:53.940
different kind of fish in different areas.
00:15:56.070 --> 00:16:01.070
- Mid 1800s, 1870s, we were
given a communal license.
00:16:01.260 --> 00:16:04.200
It was became illegal for us
to hunt and fish like that.
00:16:05.580 --> 00:16:10.530
So we were given on a grid,
a square out in Lake Superior
00:16:10.530 --> 00:16:12.840
or a square here, and a square
there, maybe another square.
00:16:12.840 --> 00:16:15.030
And then we had to fish
that amongst two licenses
00:16:15.030 --> 00:16:18.120
for all of our villages,
and we were starving,
00:16:18.120 --> 00:16:20.400
'cause that's where you'd have to fish.
00:16:20.400 --> 00:16:22.490
You couldn't move like that anymore.
00:16:22.490 --> 00:16:26.490
- My grandma was born somewhere in 18,
00:16:26.490 --> 00:16:30.900
I don't know if it was
1850s or before that.
00:16:32.040 --> 00:16:37.040
She was (speaking in Ojibwe)
when she was baptized.
00:16:37.050 --> 00:16:42.010
So that would put her 12 or
13 years old at that time.
00:16:42.010 --> 00:16:44.060
(speaking in Ojibwe) means a young woman.
00:16:45.490 --> 00:16:49.500
So she talked about them having,
00:16:49.500 --> 00:16:52.320
the community having a net out here,
00:16:53.430 --> 00:16:55.800
made of (speaking in Ojibwe) moose hide,
00:16:55.800 --> 00:16:57.780
the same way you lace a snowshoe.
00:16:57.780 --> 00:17:01.950
It was made and it was
made like a scoop net,
00:17:01.950 --> 00:17:03.840
a big fishing net.
00:17:03.840 --> 00:17:07.070
So everybody in the
community could go out there
00:17:07.070 --> 00:17:09.150
in their canoes or little boat
00:17:09.150 --> 00:17:11.640
and they'd go scoop a couple of fish.
00:17:11.640 --> 00:17:14.550
The fish were always alive in that bag.
00:17:14.550 --> 00:17:15.690
They'd go catch a cup.
00:17:15.690 --> 00:17:17.610
They didn't know what kind
of fish it was gonna be,
00:17:17.610 --> 00:17:18.960
but it was fish.
00:17:18.960 --> 00:17:20.820
And that was their supper.
00:17:20.820 --> 00:17:24.500
The whole community did
that, not just them.
00:17:24.500 --> 00:17:27.000
- I was fortunate to be
fishing with this old fella,
00:17:27.000 --> 00:17:29.520
he had the patience to allow me
00:17:29.520 --> 00:17:32.280
to make the mistakes that I was making,
00:17:32.280 --> 00:17:36.630
and when we would get
suckers, of course we can't,
00:17:36.630 --> 00:17:38.230
nobody wants to buy a sucker,
00:17:38.230 --> 00:17:41.160
so I would break the head
and throw them back in
00:17:41.160 --> 00:17:43.740
because I didn't want to catch 'em again.
00:17:43.740 --> 00:17:47.340
And he said to me, "what are you doing?"
00:17:47.340 --> 00:17:49.890
Well, I said, "there's no money in them.
00:17:49.890 --> 00:17:52.500
I'm just throwing them back in the water."
00:17:52.500 --> 00:17:55.380
I said, "if I don't do this," I said,
00:17:55.380 --> 00:17:58.230
"we're gonna catch 'em again tomorrow."
00:17:58.230 --> 00:18:00.570
"No, no," he said, "you don't do that.
00:18:00.570 --> 00:18:02.190
You don't do that," he said.
00:18:02.190 --> 00:18:03.330
"You let 'em go.
00:18:04.200 --> 00:18:05.910
See all these other fish we got here."
00:18:05.910 --> 00:18:08.470
He said, "them whitefish and them trout?"
00:18:08.470 --> 00:18:11.970
He said, "if it wasn't for him," he said,
00:18:11.970 --> 00:18:14.970
"they'd have no place to lay their eggs."
00:18:14.970 --> 00:18:17.760
So he said, "he serves a purpose.
00:18:17.760 --> 00:18:22.200
The Creator don't like one
fish better than the other.
00:18:22.200 --> 00:18:24.930
Everything is put here
for a purpose," he said.
00:18:24.930 --> 00:18:26.040
"Now this is what you do.
00:18:26.040 --> 00:18:27.660
You let 'em go."
00:18:27.660 --> 00:18:29.850
And so I'd let them go.
00:18:31.230 --> 00:18:35.070
And it's true as I said about
the next day, sure enough,
00:18:35.070 --> 00:18:37.320
we get that fish again the next day.
00:18:37.320 --> 00:18:39.900
"Look at here," I said, you
see these bite marks on him?
00:18:39.900 --> 00:18:41.520
I said, "we took them water already."
00:18:41.520 --> 00:18:44.090
"That's okay," he said,
you know, "let 'em go."
00:18:49.250 --> 00:18:53.370
- Old Woman Bay, my grandma
used to tell a story about it.
00:18:53.370 --> 00:18:58.370
And she said that there
was a (speaking in Ojibwe)
00:18:58.500 --> 00:19:00.060
they called her.
00:19:00.060 --> 00:19:04.560
She was a bad old woman,
and she did things
00:19:04.560 --> 00:19:07.710
to people in the village.
00:19:07.710 --> 00:19:11.160
So they banished her.
00:19:11.160 --> 00:19:13.990
Punishment was banishment in them days.
00:19:13.990 --> 00:19:18.760
So anyway, they say the
story was that she left
00:19:18.760 --> 00:19:21.170
and she went along the ice
00:19:21.170 --> 00:19:23.540
and she went all the way along the ice,
00:19:23.540 --> 00:19:26.830
and when you crawl, when
you're out on the ice,
00:19:26.830 --> 00:19:28.860
you can hear in the wintertime,
00:19:28.860 --> 00:19:32.700
it goes (vocalizes) on the ice
(vocalizes) goes like that,
00:19:32.700 --> 00:19:34.680
that it makes that sound.
00:19:34.680 --> 00:19:37.170
All the way up the lake, she went.
00:19:38.010 --> 00:19:43.010
And when she got up to Old Woman Bay,
00:19:43.570 --> 00:19:47.880
she sees land, sees all the land there,
00:19:47.880 --> 00:19:51.150
and sees the rocks and that up there,
00:19:51.150 --> 00:19:53.460
so she crawls up there.
00:19:54.570 --> 00:19:59.570
So she gets up there and I
don't know whatever happened
00:19:59.760 --> 00:20:03.160
if she froze in time or
what happened to her,
00:20:03.160 --> 00:20:07.260
but when I was a child
going by there on the boat,
00:20:07.260 --> 00:20:10.280
my mom and dad would point her out
00:20:10.280 --> 00:20:14.940
and it was a shape of a
woman's face and a body,
00:20:14.940 --> 00:20:19.500
like you could see, and her
hair flowing down her back.
00:20:19.500 --> 00:20:24.500
And she's still up there in
Old Woman Bay to this day.
00:20:25.020 --> 00:20:28.380
But banishment pretty well
meant death in those years
00:20:28.380 --> 00:20:30.270
because there was no food.
00:20:30.270 --> 00:20:32.490
If they didn't get together
and have food together,
00:20:32.490 --> 00:20:36.120
well, they have make meals together,
00:20:36.120 --> 00:20:37.710
they didn't have anything.
00:20:42.120 --> 00:20:46.050
So, you know, things like that,
00:20:46.050 --> 00:20:50.580
that stays, hopefully
stays in my mind, you know,
00:20:50.580 --> 00:20:53.250
for a while yet, because, you know,
00:20:53.250 --> 00:20:57.420
it's getting to the point
where we as a native nation,
00:20:59.550 --> 00:21:00.930
we're losing everything.
00:21:00.930 --> 00:21:04.140
We're losing our language,
we're losing our ways,
00:21:04.140 --> 00:21:09.140
you know, even our caring and
sharing, you know, kindness.
00:21:12.510 --> 00:21:17.370
Years ago when I was a child, they would,
00:21:17.370 --> 00:21:20.370
as soon as you came into somebody's house,
00:21:20.370 --> 00:21:25.370
they knock on the door,
(speaking in Ojibwe) they'd say.
00:21:25.770 --> 00:21:28.080
"Somebody's knocking on the door."
00:21:28.080 --> 00:21:30.690
(speaking in Ojibwe)
"come on in" they'd say.
00:21:30.690 --> 00:21:35.190
Everybody had a teapot
in them days, big teapot.
00:21:36.080 --> 00:21:38.690
As soon as they'd come
in, they offered them tea,
00:21:38.690 --> 00:21:43.690
bannock, homemade jam,
applesauce, whatever they had.
00:21:44.010 --> 00:21:46.830
And if it was supper time,
00:21:46.830 --> 00:21:50.610
they would always just
never ask the person
00:21:50.610 --> 00:21:51.870
if he was hungry or anything,
00:21:51.870 --> 00:21:53.690
they just put another plate on the table.
00:21:53.690 --> 00:21:58.690
(speaking in Ojibwe) "sit
down here, come and eat here."
00:21:58.710 --> 00:22:00.560
And most cases, they'd sit down
00:22:00.560 --> 00:22:03.630
and they'd have supper with them, eh?
00:22:03.630 --> 00:22:07.770
Today, lots of times I go someplace,
00:22:07.770 --> 00:22:10.050
you don't mean to go there at supper time,
00:22:10.050 --> 00:22:12.990
but you just happen to
be there at that time,
00:22:12.990 --> 00:22:14.400
what do they do?
00:22:14.400 --> 00:22:16.710
They pick all the plates off the table
00:22:16.710 --> 00:22:20.710
and they push the pots
to the back of the stove
00:22:20.710 --> 00:22:22.700
and they say, "come in!"
00:22:23.610 --> 00:22:26.040
You know, and never offer you to eat.
00:22:26.040 --> 00:22:29.070
So we're losing the
caring and the sharing.
00:22:32.070 --> 00:22:37.070
- My dad, he'd go out fishing with a net
00:22:40.890 --> 00:22:45.890
bring in a box full of fish,
share it with the Indians.
00:22:49.590 --> 00:22:53.940
It was always that name, share.
00:22:56.850 --> 00:22:58.560
You share with them.
00:23:01.460 --> 00:23:03.300
So that's what we did.
00:23:05.950 --> 00:23:07.140
- They said they would give us a quota
00:23:07.140 --> 00:23:09.840
of like 200 and some thousand pounds.
00:23:09.840 --> 00:23:14.440
You know, I mean, our
fishermen would be so poor
00:23:14.440 --> 00:23:18.660
because, you know, but it's a good thing
00:23:18.660 --> 00:23:20.370
that they never, ever accepted the quota,
00:23:20.370 --> 00:23:24.900
because that would've
killed our people there,
00:23:24.900 --> 00:23:27.660
I think in regard to, you
know, being an active fishery,
00:23:27.660 --> 00:23:30.840
being active on the
management of the fisheries.
00:23:34.540 --> 00:23:39.540
- All the Indians, they
lived in Baawaating.
00:23:40.380 --> 00:23:42.240
They lived there.
00:23:42.240 --> 00:23:43.400
They were happy.
00:23:44.510 --> 00:23:48.110
And my mother always fished, always fished
00:23:53.520 --> 00:23:58.520
went out to the lake, and
not only that, she trapped.
00:24:00.640 --> 00:24:03.010
She was a trapper
00:24:05.250 --> 00:24:06.550
Same with my dad.
00:24:08.630 --> 00:24:11.370
He was a trapper too.
00:24:11.370 --> 00:24:14.290
And he always fought the white man.
00:24:17.930 --> 00:24:22.930
And he said, "I'll never,
never get a license,
00:24:28.500 --> 00:24:32.520
because I have the treaty book that says
00:24:33.640 --> 00:24:38.560
that I can fish without a license
00:24:39.690 --> 00:24:44.690
as long as the green grass
grows and the water flows,
00:24:47.700 --> 00:24:49.040
by Queen Victoria."
00:24:52.500 --> 00:24:57.500
- And if you accept somebody
else's delegated authority,
00:24:58.230 --> 00:25:00.120
then you're saying that your constitution
00:25:00.120 --> 00:25:01.710
as Anishinaabe is out.
00:25:19.200 --> 00:25:20.030
- Hiya, Greg.
00:25:20.030 --> 00:25:21.110
- Come on in.
00:25:25.440 --> 00:25:26.970
- My name is Greg Agawa.
00:25:26.970 --> 00:25:29.010
I'm a Batchewana First Nation member.
00:25:29.010 --> 00:25:30.120
I've been back to my fishing,
00:25:30.120 --> 00:25:30.950
that's what I've been
doing most of my life
00:25:30.950 --> 00:25:32.580
when I was around here.
00:25:33.810 --> 00:25:37.920
Sometimes I get mad at our
First Nation, Dean, the council,
00:25:37.920 --> 00:25:42.090
because they don't seem to
understand what the treaty means
00:25:42.090 --> 00:25:45.080
or what the agreements
we made with them means.
00:25:45.080 --> 00:25:48.030
They just seem to go along and collect
00:25:48.030 --> 00:25:50.930
a couple of those dollars that
we get from the government.
00:25:52.350 --> 00:25:54.000
It's not supposed to be that way.
00:25:54.990 --> 00:25:57.420
We are supposed to be the ones in control
00:25:57.420 --> 00:25:59.070
and the governments are
supposed to be doing
00:25:59.070 --> 00:26:02.130
what we tell them, but
they turned it right around
00:26:02.130 --> 00:26:04.830
where they're in control.
00:26:04.830 --> 00:26:07.290
- [Dean] The government, the Crown,
00:26:07.290 --> 00:26:09.960
had issued a mining permit
00:26:09.960 --> 00:26:12.360
up at Mamass Harbor.
00:26:12.360 --> 00:26:15.720
It was illegal because
there was no treaty.
00:26:15.720 --> 00:26:16.830
There was supposed to be a treaty
00:26:16.830 --> 00:26:19.410
before anybody did any development.
00:26:20.850 --> 00:26:25.680
- Batchewana as a First
Nation owns all this land
00:26:25.680 --> 00:26:27.960
from here up to Packasaw.
00:26:27.960 --> 00:26:31.160
They owned the lake, the water, the land.
00:26:31.160 --> 00:26:33.240
And it is because of a treaty agreement
00:26:33.240 --> 00:26:35.550
we made with the Crown
many, many years ago.
00:26:36.780 --> 00:26:41.780
And it's a treaty agreement
that at the time they made it,
00:26:41.910 --> 00:26:44.520
our people didn't wanna
make no treaty agreement
00:26:44.520 --> 00:26:47.110
with the immigrants that were here
00:26:48.180 --> 00:26:49.710
for the very reason they knew
00:26:49.710 --> 00:26:51.390
what they were going to do with the land
00:26:51.390 --> 00:26:53.640
and the water and everything else here.
00:26:54.480 --> 00:26:56.460
It's pretty well come true.
00:26:56.460 --> 00:27:00.090
What they feared is happening.
00:27:05.010 --> 00:27:08.700
Before 1850, my dad used to tell me
00:27:08.700 --> 00:27:10.500
that if one of our people got up
00:27:10.500 --> 00:27:13.950
and went against the government,
in the middle of the night,
00:27:13.950 --> 00:27:15.120
they'd come and get 'em.
00:27:15.120 --> 00:27:17.610
They'd take 'em in the bush and shoot 'em.
00:27:17.610 --> 00:27:21.030
See, at that time they could shoot us,
00:27:21.030 --> 00:27:23.220
because we weren't considered human.
00:27:23.220 --> 00:27:24.690
We were considered animals.
00:27:26.610 --> 00:27:28.710
- We borrowed a cannon
in Sault St. Marie here,
00:27:28.710 --> 00:27:32.490
and we paddled up there in 1849.
00:27:32.490 --> 00:27:34.980
We got up there and we
fired one shot into the mine
00:27:34.980 --> 00:27:37.620
and they arrested us and
they took us to Toronto,
00:27:37.620 --> 00:27:38.450
the chiefs.
00:27:40.680 --> 00:27:43.290
- They keep on throwing
garbage in the lake.
00:27:43.290 --> 00:27:45.720
They keep on cutting
our land, our forests,
00:27:45.720 --> 00:27:50.720
and they devastate the place
all for a couple dollars.
00:27:52.110 --> 00:27:55.920
- So we actually sent our
leadership down to Niagara
00:27:55.920 --> 00:27:58.170
the following year, the
governor general of the day,
00:27:58.170 --> 00:28:01.980
I think it was Colburn
said, "they're right.
00:28:01.980 --> 00:28:04.090
The Chiefs of Batchewana, the
chiefs in that area are right.
00:28:04.090 --> 00:28:06.240
Released them.
00:28:06.240 --> 00:28:07.920
Get a treaty with them."
00:28:07.920 --> 00:28:11.430
After that little bit
of a scuttle up there,
00:28:12.450 --> 00:28:14.550
that cannon, they threw it
in the water on the way back,
00:28:14.550 --> 00:28:16.440
and that's one of the fishermen
knows where that cannon is.
00:28:16.440 --> 00:28:18.570
We're gonna see him today too.
00:28:18.570 --> 00:28:21.450
They needed to legalize
this mine on Mica Bay.
00:28:21.450 --> 00:28:22.650
That was the main intention.
00:28:22.650 --> 00:28:24.300
But they figured, well,
let's just get everybody
00:28:24.300 --> 00:28:26.460
at the same time and settle the whole area
00:28:26.460 --> 00:28:29.310
and get a treaty so that
then it's legal for us
00:28:29.310 --> 00:28:33.360
to open up for settlement
the whole area in 1850.
00:28:34.830 --> 00:28:37.200
- We as First Nation people
have to look after the land
00:28:37.200 --> 00:28:39.300
and have to look after that lake,
00:28:39.300 --> 00:28:41.460
have to look after the fish, the animals,
00:28:42.380 --> 00:28:45.180
because they have a right
to be here as well as we do.
00:28:45.180 --> 00:28:48.810
And the more forest we cut,
00:28:48.810 --> 00:28:50.880
the last place they gotta go.
00:28:50.880 --> 00:28:54.990
And lots of time they come
down here, come and visit us,
00:28:55.850 --> 00:28:57.990
because they have no place else to go.
00:28:58.940 --> 00:29:00.310
- But Batchewana said,
00:29:00.310 --> 00:29:02.960
"no, we're not gonna sign the treaty."
00:29:03.930 --> 00:29:08.310
We said, "we expect to get an annuity,
00:29:08.310 --> 00:29:10.680
an annual payment to us.
00:29:11.670 --> 00:29:12.840
And we wanted in the treaty,"
00:29:12.840 --> 00:29:17.280
so that we would get not
only the treaty payment,
00:29:17.280 --> 00:29:20.400
which is an annuity, but we wanted to have
00:29:20.400 --> 00:29:22.470
an escalator clause so that every year
00:29:22.470 --> 00:29:25.650
that the crown made money,
we would make money.
00:29:25.650 --> 00:29:28.110
And we had been in the
business for a while.
00:29:28.110 --> 00:29:29.480
We were always treating as a people
00:29:29.480 --> 00:29:30.810
and we were fairly educated.
00:29:30.810 --> 00:29:35.550
We actually brought a lawyer
to the treaty negotiations.
00:29:35.550 --> 00:29:37.530
And of course the ground said
if the lawyer don't leave,
00:29:37.530 --> 00:29:39.210
there'd be no treaty for anybody.
00:29:39.210 --> 00:29:43.380
It was illegal for a lawyer to
work for an Indian in Canada,
00:29:43.380 --> 00:29:46.650
that stayed in the books
till the 1950s, 1951.
00:29:46.650 --> 00:29:48.690
What the Crown decided to do was that
00:29:48.690 --> 00:29:51.870
if Batchewana is not gonna
sign off on this mine up here,
00:29:51.870 --> 00:29:53.340
then we'll make two treaties.
00:29:53.340 --> 00:29:56.820
The Robinson Superior Treaty
and the Robinson Huron Treaty.
00:29:56.820 --> 00:29:58.980
And they made the Robinson Superior Treaty
00:29:58.980 --> 00:30:00.660
come down below that mine,
00:30:00.660 --> 00:30:04.050
superior chiefs would sign off on the area
00:30:04.050 --> 00:30:04.880
where the mine is,
00:30:04.880 --> 00:30:07.420
and Batchewana would be
a part of Lake Huron,
00:30:07.420 --> 00:30:09.120
which really doesn't make sense
00:30:09.120 --> 00:30:11.910
when we have almost 200
miles of coastline here
00:30:11.910 --> 00:30:15.450
that's Batchewana Robinson Superior.
00:30:15.450 --> 00:30:19.350
So in that 1850 treaty,
the Robinson Treaties,
00:30:19.350 --> 00:30:22.920
we retain title and we
reserved this for ourselves.
00:30:22.920 --> 00:30:24.960
We shared the benefits from it,
00:30:24.960 --> 00:30:27.120
but we retained underlying title.
00:30:27.120 --> 00:30:29.010
- We didn't want to give up all the stuff
00:30:29.010 --> 00:30:30.600
that we had to give up.
00:30:30.600 --> 00:30:33.200
But in 1850, we did make a good treaty
00:30:33.200 --> 00:30:37.160
for what we'd look after
for all the time, eh,
00:30:37.160 --> 00:30:41.610
but then the government
in their good wisdom
00:30:41.610 --> 00:30:45.600
made up their own little
treaty and put it in place
00:30:45.600 --> 00:30:47.580
and made us go by it
whether we liked it or not,
00:30:47.580 --> 00:30:48.530
or else get killed.
00:30:51.750 --> 00:30:55.430
- We're at an old fisherman, an elder
00:30:55.430 --> 00:30:58.560
who had a tremendous responsibility for us
00:30:58.560 --> 00:31:02.670
looking after our fishery,
more so up the lake.
00:31:02.670 --> 00:31:05.220
His name was Angus Kakopshe.
00:31:05.220 --> 00:31:09.060
But this fish shack was on Lake Superior
00:31:09.060 --> 00:31:10.260
in front of his house.
00:31:11.190 --> 00:31:13.380
He was the actual last caretaker
00:31:13.380 --> 00:31:14.730
of Lake Superior Provincial Park,
00:31:14.730 --> 00:31:16.860
and they burnt his cabin out up there.
00:31:18.360 --> 00:31:20.580
And I have not been
here since I was a kid,
00:31:20.580 --> 00:31:21.720
so I thought maybe we'd just come down
00:31:21.720 --> 00:31:23.550
and take a peek in here.
00:31:23.550 --> 00:31:25.470
It was traumatizing to our people
00:31:25.470 --> 00:31:28.950
not being able to exercise
the full obligation
00:31:28.950 --> 00:31:30.900
that we have of looking after the land.
00:31:31.920 --> 00:31:33.180
Pretty cool stuff.
00:31:33.180 --> 00:31:34.920
There's an old fish scale in here,
00:31:34.920 --> 00:31:37.290
and some looks like mason jars,
00:31:37.290 --> 00:31:40.320
some remnants of a fish net, anchors.
00:31:41.850 --> 00:31:42.810
But we never forgotten
00:31:42.810 --> 00:31:45.660
and we never lost sight of
those original obligations.
00:31:48.000 --> 00:31:49.680
I'm wondering if we
might be able to stop by,
00:31:49.680 --> 00:31:51.750
I tried to get ahold of
you guys the other day,
00:31:51.750 --> 00:31:54.900
to come and interview
Olaf for a little while
00:31:54.900 --> 00:31:56.430
for a documentary we're making,
00:31:56.430 --> 00:31:57.960
a documentary about the fishery
00:31:57.960 --> 00:32:00.630
and he's got such a way with words,
00:32:00.630 --> 00:32:04.560
but I thought, we need him
in this too if it's okay.
00:32:08.780 --> 00:32:11.310
- In the summertime on a nice clear day,
00:32:11.310 --> 00:32:13.890
you take a stovepipe, and
you put it in the water
00:32:13.890 --> 00:32:17.680
and you look down,
there's no ripples in it.
00:32:17.680 --> 00:32:19.980
You can still see it
laying on the side there.
00:32:21.230 --> 00:32:23.220
That cannon has a lot of history.
00:32:23.220 --> 00:32:25.620
There has been a lot
of people wanting to go
00:32:25.620 --> 00:32:28.300
and lift it up and take it home.
00:32:28.300 --> 00:32:33.300
I used to go two or three
times in the summer,
00:32:33.300 --> 00:32:35.790
say, "well, we'll pay you to take it up."
00:32:35.790 --> 00:32:38.480
I said, "maybe that cannon
is there for a purpose."
00:32:46.440 --> 00:32:48.250
My name is Olaf Bjornaa.
00:32:51.360 --> 00:32:56.250
In my family, there was seven of us.
00:32:58.930 --> 00:33:01.770
I went to work when I was about 13.
00:33:03.310 --> 00:33:07.350
I don't read or write,
but I ain't tongue tied.
00:33:10.710 --> 00:33:12.840
Fishing used to be my livelihood.
00:33:12.840 --> 00:33:14.790
Around here there wasn't that many,
00:33:14.790 --> 00:33:17.250
you were either a fisherman or a logger.
00:33:18.240 --> 00:33:21.750
A bit of mining come after, but yeah,
00:33:21.750 --> 00:33:26.010
there we used to get at least
two or three license holders.
00:33:26.010 --> 00:33:29.900
Gros Cap was a bunch of fishmen there.
00:33:29.900 --> 00:33:31.550
And then the Goulais Bay Mission,
00:33:32.430 --> 00:33:34.980
they'd come right up in the Batchewana,
00:33:34.980 --> 00:33:36.800
fished here by the island.
00:33:37.710 --> 00:33:40.340
They fished the islands
00:33:40.340 --> 00:33:45.340
They went over to Michipicoten Harbour.
00:33:45.760 --> 00:33:47.390
There was some freshman out there,
00:33:47.390 --> 00:33:48.990
but never like there used to be.
00:33:49.890 --> 00:33:54.540
The game warden was too busy
hunting us to break to law.
00:33:55.440 --> 00:33:58.970
- Well, they used to come
up right here, really,
00:33:58.970 --> 00:34:01.920
and he had their side arms, he'd pat them,
00:34:01.920 --> 00:34:04.320
pat them, and kinda look at me.
00:34:04.320 --> 00:34:06.810
- I used to have more arguments with him
00:34:06.810 --> 00:34:09.510
than you can shake a stick at.
00:34:10.380 --> 00:34:11.310
Let's jump in.
00:34:11.310 --> 00:34:12.140
Oh.
00:34:15.980 --> 00:34:18.630
- My name is Alan James
Sayers, everybody calls me Jim.
00:34:18.630 --> 00:34:20.760
Everybody knows me as Jim Sayers.
00:34:20.760 --> 00:34:21.840
I'll be heading out.
00:34:22.710 --> 00:34:24.660
Get the boat started,
00:34:24.660 --> 00:34:26.700
and we got some gill nets ready to go.
00:34:26.700 --> 00:34:27.660
We're on my vessel.
00:34:27.660 --> 00:34:31.890
It's called the Gordonna J,
it's named after my parents,
00:34:31.890 --> 00:34:33.420
Gordon and Donna.
00:34:33.420 --> 00:34:38.420
They were instrumental in
pursuing our treaty right to fish.
00:34:39.450 --> 00:34:42.510
I owned the company, it's
called Crane Fisheries.
00:34:42.510 --> 00:34:45.540
It's my totem, my clan.
00:34:48.950 --> 00:34:51.600
Here we got the wheelhouse
and we'll get her started.
00:34:52.740 --> 00:34:53.670
- Okay.
00:34:53.670 --> 00:34:55.470
- My dad, when I was seven years old,
00:34:55.470 --> 00:34:58.590
got into a car accident
and was a quadriplegic.
00:34:58.590 --> 00:35:02.280
So he spent a lot of time
reading, doing some research,
00:35:02.280 --> 00:35:04.950
he determined that we had a treaty right
00:35:04.950 --> 00:35:07.080
to commercial fish that
we didn't need a license,
00:35:07.080 --> 00:35:09.210
not from the federal or
provincial government.
00:35:09.210 --> 00:35:12.540
So we engaged the Batchewana First Nation.
00:35:12.540 --> 00:35:14.300
Now the Batchewana First Nation
00:35:14.300 --> 00:35:19.300
who weren't all commercial
fishermen had to be,
00:35:19.530 --> 00:35:21.840
I guess, influenced to pursue this.
00:35:21.840 --> 00:35:26.840
But the idea was to prove
that the 1850 Robinson Treaty
00:35:28.380 --> 00:35:30.900
was valid in a living document.
00:35:43.190 --> 00:35:45.690
(engine revs)
00:35:48.000 --> 00:35:49.080
- My name is Ian Agawa
00:35:49.080 --> 00:35:52.530
and I'm a Batchewana First
Nation commercial fisherman.
00:35:52.530 --> 00:35:55.230
And we are here at the Goulais Bay dock
00:35:55.230 --> 00:35:56.980
located at the end of Mission Road.
00:35:58.170 --> 00:36:00.670
(engine revs)
00:36:04.340 --> 00:36:06.270
We're at about 95 feet here.
00:36:06.270 --> 00:36:08.250
I'm not sure exactly
where the fish might be,
00:36:08.250 --> 00:36:10.920
but usually when you
start to set your nets,
00:36:10.920 --> 00:36:12.690
you, you know, try to cover
00:36:12.690 --> 00:36:14.220
as much different depths as you can,
00:36:14.220 --> 00:36:16.230
And then when you go
to lift them, you know,
00:36:16.230 --> 00:36:17.190
if they're more in the shallow,
00:36:17.190 --> 00:36:18.990
then you could target
the fish in the shallow
00:36:18.990 --> 00:36:19.830
or in the deep.
00:36:20.850 --> 00:36:23.820
But I believe it's written
right in the treaties that,
00:36:23.820 --> 00:36:25.830
you know, we're allowed to do this.
00:36:25.830 --> 00:36:28.080
They can check the anglers out
00:36:28.080 --> 00:36:32.370
and the licensed people that
have to follow the regulations,
00:36:32.370 --> 00:36:34.950
But as a native commercial fishermen,
00:36:34.950 --> 00:36:36.750
we don't have those restrictions,
00:36:36.750 --> 00:36:38.790
because it's said right in a treaty
00:36:38.790 --> 00:36:41.730
that we're allowed to hunt
and fish as we did then,
00:36:41.730 --> 00:36:44.640
And we will continue to do so.
00:36:46.230 --> 00:36:48.630
- In regards to MNR, even
though a lot of things
00:36:48.630 --> 00:36:51.770
have changed and they got a lot better,
00:36:51.770 --> 00:36:54.840
guys my age that have been around
00:36:54.840 --> 00:36:58.410
and had to deal with the old
regime, I guess you could say,
00:36:59.530 --> 00:37:01.950
it's still hard to deal with them.
00:37:01.950 --> 00:37:04.080
The word trust comes into play.
00:37:04.950 --> 00:37:06.720
- Every time we used to see an airplane,
00:37:06.720 --> 00:37:09.930
we used to look up and say,
"uh-oh, here comes the MNR."
00:37:09.930 --> 00:37:11.280
Airplane, there was the yellow airplane.
00:37:11.280 --> 00:37:14.360
Sure enough, that airplane
would circle around once,
00:37:14.360 --> 00:37:16.770
and first thing you know,
he'd come right down at us.
00:37:16.770 --> 00:37:18.120
- I fished around there, yeah.
00:37:18.120 --> 00:37:22.200
And Ministry of Natural
Resources would come hounding me.
00:37:22.200 --> 00:37:24.030
- In the past when I was the chief,
00:37:24.030 --> 00:37:28.500
we ran into this where the
Ministry of Natural Resources
00:37:28.500 --> 00:37:31.050
were indicating to the fish buyers
00:37:31.050 --> 00:37:33.000
that if you buy off of
Batchewana fisherman,
00:37:33.000 --> 00:37:34.680
you're gonna get a ticket,
they're gonna get fined,
00:37:34.680 --> 00:37:36.320
blah, blah, blah, blah, so.
00:37:36.320 --> 00:37:40.520
- Buying our fish,
restaurants, stores, whatever.
00:37:40.520 --> 00:37:42.620
And overnight, they just (slaps hand),
00:37:44.340 --> 00:37:46.530
the ministry went to every
one of them stores and said,
00:37:46.530 --> 00:37:49.050
"if you buy those guys' fish that are,
00:37:49.050 --> 00:37:51.270
they're fishing without a license.
00:37:51.270 --> 00:37:52.590
Now," they said,
00:37:52.590 --> 00:37:54.990
"we're going to take your license.
00:37:54.990 --> 00:37:57.680
You won't be able to have
a store or a meat market."
00:38:00.660 --> 00:38:01.490
- Hi.
00:38:01.490 --> 00:38:02.320
- How you doing?
00:38:02.320 --> 00:38:03.150
- Good, yeah?
00:38:03.150 --> 00:38:04.780
Hi guys.
- [Worker] How you doing?
00:38:04.780 --> 00:38:05.620
- Hey, hi.
00:38:05.620 --> 00:38:06.890
Good.
00:38:06.890 --> 00:38:09.450
It smells fishy around here.
00:38:10.860 --> 00:38:11.790
Not bad, no?
00:38:12.900 --> 00:38:15.240
- I'm James Agawa,
better known as Seagull.
00:38:16.140 --> 00:38:18.540
Born, raised here in Batchewana.
00:38:18.540 --> 00:38:21.300
When I first went to school, I
never knew my name was James.
00:38:21.300 --> 00:38:23.520
People called me Seagull my whole life.
00:38:23.520 --> 00:38:25.950
So when I went to school,
they asked all the kids,
00:38:25.950 --> 00:38:28.650
"is there anybody here I
haven't called their name?"
00:38:28.650 --> 00:38:30.420
Put my hand up.
00:38:30.420 --> 00:38:31.680
"What's your name?"
00:38:31.680 --> 00:38:32.640
I said, "Seagull."
00:38:32.640 --> 00:38:33.780
"Nope.
00:38:33.780 --> 00:38:35.550
You must be James."
00:38:35.550 --> 00:38:39.990
So James Agawa, better known as Seagull.
00:38:39.990 --> 00:38:41.490
Well, this is my fish plant.
00:38:43.650 --> 00:38:45.870
We started this two years ago.
00:38:45.870 --> 00:38:48.150
We needed to get modern.
00:38:48.150 --> 00:38:51.930
This building is what we
needed for a long time.
00:38:51.930 --> 00:38:54.000
I've been smoking fish
since I was 15 years old
00:38:54.000 --> 00:38:57.810
at Fair Glad Fisheries, where
I learned how to handle fish.
00:38:57.810 --> 00:39:01.740
It's our smokehouse, state of the art.
00:39:02.790 --> 00:39:04.290
Set it, forget it.
00:39:04.290 --> 00:39:07.170
- Yeah, we started out
in that little wee boat.
00:39:07.170 --> 00:39:08.520
This is where we are today.
00:39:11.730 --> 00:39:14.790
- Ended up, I bought my own boat,
00:39:14.790 --> 00:39:16.770
I bought a 65 foot boat.
00:39:16.770 --> 00:39:18.570
It's an oldie, but it's a goodie,
00:39:18.570 --> 00:39:23.040
and can't imagine not ever having a boat.
00:39:23.040 --> 00:39:25.230
I don't know how I got along without one.
00:39:25.230 --> 00:39:27.060
It's called the Coranet,
00:39:27.060 --> 00:39:30.240
and it's the heart and soul
of my entire operation.
00:39:37.140 --> 00:39:39.870
- I was charged with
fishing without a license
00:39:39.870 --> 00:39:44.790
because we had an Ontario
license up until then.
00:39:44.790 --> 00:39:46.110
We had two licenses, really.
00:39:46.110 --> 00:39:49.670
One here and one, I think
Angus had one in Batchewana,
00:39:49.670 --> 00:39:51.500
but we were fishing,
00:39:51.500 --> 00:39:54.840
we were charged with
fishing without a license.
00:39:54.840 --> 00:39:59.400
And I think it was 1981 when we decided
00:39:59.400 --> 00:40:01.510
we're not gonna take the license.
00:40:01.510 --> 00:40:05.010
We have a right to fish, we have a treaty.
00:40:05.010 --> 00:40:06.270
It's in our treaty.
00:40:06.270 --> 00:40:07.770
We have a right to fish.
00:40:07.770 --> 00:40:11.640
So when we started fishing,
they started charging us.
00:40:11.640 --> 00:40:14.070
- The license that we had
and we were fishing on it,
00:40:14.070 --> 00:40:17.370
there was approximately
three or four of us fishing
00:40:17.370 --> 00:40:19.020
on that license.
00:40:19.020 --> 00:40:21.480
The amount of quota that was on that
00:40:21.480 --> 00:40:23.130
wouldn't sustain one fisherman.
00:40:24.270 --> 00:40:26.340
- I said, "according to the Indian Act,
00:40:26.340 --> 00:40:30.150
I'm supposed to exercise my
right where my ancestry begins.
00:40:30.150 --> 00:40:32.000
And it began here in Agawa Bay.
00:40:32.000 --> 00:40:35.220
You want to charge me
with fishing Agawa Bay?
00:40:35.220 --> 00:40:38.490
You're gonna look damn
stupid in front of a court.
00:40:38.490 --> 00:40:41.880
Charging Mr. Agawa fishing in Agawa Bay
00:40:41.880 --> 00:40:43.980
where his ancestry began."
00:40:43.980 --> 00:40:45.090
- They think when they see a boat,
00:40:45.090 --> 00:40:47.310
it's like a big vacuum
cleaner, especially a tugboat,
00:40:47.310 --> 00:40:49.950
and it just goes along
and sucks up all the fish.
00:40:49.950 --> 00:40:51.900
That's not how nets work.
00:40:51.900 --> 00:40:54.810
A gill net is made a certain size of web
00:40:54.810 --> 00:40:56.790
to catch a certain size of fish.
00:40:56.790 --> 00:40:59.280
We use a four and three quarter inch mesh
00:40:59.280 --> 00:41:01.770
where only fish from
two and a half pounds,
00:41:01.770 --> 00:41:05.370
three pounds, to maybe
six pounds get caught.
00:41:05.370 --> 00:41:07.260
The little guys go right through.
00:41:07.260 --> 00:41:12.260
So there's always a supply of
fish for the years to come.
00:41:12.720 --> 00:41:15.240
- I remember them talking
at one point in time
00:41:15.240 --> 00:41:17.970
when we were fishing, the
Ministry of Natural Resources
00:41:17.970 --> 00:41:22.970
showed us a big pie on this blackboard.
00:41:26.170 --> 00:41:29.490
This one is for that one.
00:41:29.490 --> 00:41:34.490
All the pieces of that
pie, who it belongs to,
00:41:34.800 --> 00:41:37.620
and Batchewana Band had a
little sliver like that,
00:41:39.480 --> 00:41:44.480
and I'm not the sharpest
knife in a drawer,
00:41:44.850 --> 00:41:49.200
smartest guy around, but Jesus Christ,
00:41:49.200 --> 00:41:52.620
by being generous, look at
this, I'm thinking to myself,
00:41:52.620 --> 00:41:57.620
we own that whole pie and we
share that with everybody.
00:41:58.620 --> 00:42:00.160
Look how much is there for us though?
00:42:00.160 --> 00:42:02.010
A little wee sliver.
00:42:02.010 --> 00:42:03.750
It's shameful.
00:42:03.750 --> 00:42:05.070
That is shameful!
00:42:05.910 --> 00:42:08.490
I said to the ministry,
"you know what we need?"
00:42:08.490 --> 00:42:09.760
He says, "no.
00:42:09.760 --> 00:42:11.820
What do you need?"
00:42:11.820 --> 00:42:13.170
"We need a new pie.
00:42:14.280 --> 00:42:15.870
And in that new pie," I said,
00:42:15.870 --> 00:42:19.470
"we'll share that in our own way."
00:42:19.470 --> 00:42:22.300
- It's a right, it's not a privilege.
00:42:22.300 --> 00:42:23.490
It's our right.
00:42:23.490 --> 00:42:26.790
And it's something that
we take very serious,
00:42:26.790 --> 00:42:29.730
and with the right comes responsibility.
00:42:29.730 --> 00:42:31.600
Instead of working together,
00:42:31.600 --> 00:42:33.570
they're hoping that they can say,
00:42:33.570 --> 00:42:36.150
"well, look, you know, those
Indians couldn't do it,
00:42:36.150 --> 00:42:38.310
so we gotta go and look after it."
00:42:38.310 --> 00:42:40.320
- I've never been in any court battle
00:42:40.320 --> 00:42:45.320
to say that I could fish,
but I would die for fishing.
00:42:46.140 --> 00:42:47.820
That's what it means to me.
00:42:47.820 --> 00:42:52.110
I would be on the front
line and to see it continue.
00:42:52.110 --> 00:42:54.330
It's a necessity.
00:42:54.330 --> 00:42:56.640
It's something that we need to do.
00:42:56.640 --> 00:42:58.380
- We did go to provincial court.
00:42:58.380 --> 00:43:02.520
We were convicted of commercial
fishing without a license,
00:43:02.520 --> 00:43:07.000
and we refined $503 per count.
00:43:07.000 --> 00:43:09.000
- Who pays the superior court?
00:43:09.000 --> 00:43:11.010
Who pays the provincial court?
00:43:11.010 --> 00:43:12.180
Provincial government.
00:43:12.180 --> 00:43:14.380
They'll say, "you got two strikes you
00:43:14.380 --> 00:43:16.920
as a First Nation person"
00:43:16.920 --> 00:43:20.310
and they bring down the third one.
00:43:20.310 --> 00:43:22.170
Supreme Court didn't see it that way
00:43:22.170 --> 00:43:23.670
when it was Sparrow case.
00:43:23.670 --> 00:43:25.920
And it applies to us as well.
00:43:25.920 --> 00:43:27.180
Priority user.
00:43:27.180 --> 00:43:31.860
It's an inherent right to
fish as a First Nation person.
00:43:31.860 --> 00:43:34.080
It's not a gift from anybody.
00:43:34.080 --> 00:43:35.190
You're born with that.
00:43:35.190 --> 00:43:38.490
- A little bit of rain and fog,
so we'll turn on the radar.
00:43:39.810 --> 00:43:44.810
- That started the court challenge
and the judicial process.
00:43:45.360 --> 00:43:47.490
So basically that kind
of punted everything
00:43:47.490 --> 00:43:50.250
into the crown's lap,
00:43:51.290 --> 00:43:56.290
and they didn't really know
what to do to pursue it.
00:43:56.700 --> 00:43:59.560
We were promised that we could each have
00:43:59.560 --> 00:44:04.260
a commercial fishing
license, that we would have
00:44:04.260 --> 00:44:08.250
enough quota to make a decent living
00:44:08.250 --> 00:44:11.070
if we were to withdraw the proceedings.
00:44:12.000 --> 00:44:12.930
So obviously we didn't.
00:44:12.930 --> 00:44:16.620
We knew that we had them on the ropes.
00:44:21.780 --> 00:44:24.330
- In 2010, I think, or 2011,
00:44:24.330 --> 00:44:29.330
we actually just took full
page ad out in the Sault Star,
00:44:29.430 --> 00:44:34.140
the Toronto Star, the Sudbury
star, the Ottawa Citizen,
00:44:34.140 --> 00:44:37.380
and the Thunder Bay
Chronicle, full page ad saying
00:44:37.380 --> 00:44:39.930
"all of this land is ours.
00:44:39.930 --> 00:44:41.760
We're asserting jurisdiction.
00:44:41.760 --> 00:44:43.800
Our law will apply here.
00:44:43.800 --> 00:44:46.110
We recognize that we
have outstanding issues
00:44:46.110 --> 00:44:47.670
on a number of fronts with a number
00:44:47.670 --> 00:44:50.820
of implementation
agreements with treaties.
00:44:50.820 --> 00:44:53.310
In the meantime, however,
we are making assertions
00:44:53.310 --> 00:44:56.790
and our laws will apply
throughout this territory."
00:44:56.790 --> 00:44:59.600
- So ever since we asserted our rights,
00:44:59.600 --> 00:45:02.040
people are taking notice.
00:45:02.040 --> 00:45:07.040
The government, the private
sector, and different companies
00:45:07.650 --> 00:45:12.650
that want to extract the minerals.
00:45:13.190 --> 00:45:15.840
I know they look for gold.
00:45:15.840 --> 00:45:19.860
They look for all, silver,
whatever, diamonds.
00:45:19.860 --> 00:45:24.860
And ever since that the
assertion, those people,
00:45:27.720 --> 00:45:32.370
those companies now have
to come to our table
00:45:32.370 --> 00:45:35.400
and make an arrangements with us
00:45:35.400 --> 00:45:37.980
in order to do business on our lands.
00:45:40.680 --> 00:45:42.780
- They approach me,
00:45:42.780 --> 00:45:44.820
and they're gonna wanna
look in my fish box.
00:45:44.820 --> 00:45:45.690
I'm gonna tell them no,
00:45:45.690 --> 00:45:47.820
and I'll cover up the fish with a tarp
00:45:47.820 --> 00:45:51.960
and tell them exactly that, you know,
00:45:51.960 --> 00:45:54.630
this is a treaty license
that we're fishing.
00:45:54.630 --> 00:45:56.280
I hate using the word license,
00:45:56.280 --> 00:45:59.190
because a license can be taken away.
00:45:59.190 --> 00:46:02.100
It's an inherited right,
00:46:02.100 --> 00:46:05.520
and they can't take that
inherited right from us.
00:46:05.520 --> 00:46:08.020
(engine revs)
00:46:09.270 --> 00:46:10.640
This whole lake out here is just like,
00:46:10.640 --> 00:46:12.000
we come and go off of it.
00:46:12.000 --> 00:46:16.320
These are our fish and
we're managing the fishery,
00:46:16.320 --> 00:46:17.700
you know, in the fall time,
00:46:17.700 --> 00:46:19.410
Mother Nature takes care of itself.
00:46:19.410 --> 00:46:21.690
It'll be blowing for weeks and weeks,
00:46:21.690 --> 00:46:23.670
sometimes those fish are spawning
00:46:23.670 --> 00:46:27.270
and we have to respect
it too at the same time.
00:46:27.270 --> 00:46:29.670
And maybe even leaving it in better shape
00:46:29.670 --> 00:46:31.500
for the next generation.
00:46:31.500 --> 00:46:36.500
You know, like, I want my son
and my daughter to do this.
00:46:37.300 --> 00:46:39.000
You know, if they choose to do it,
00:46:39.000 --> 00:46:40.600
there'll be fish there for them.
00:46:41.820 --> 00:46:43.800
- I just like to make
things better for our people
00:46:43.800 --> 00:46:45.600
so that our people can get
00:46:45.600 --> 00:46:48.920
what they were supposed
to get from the start.
00:46:48.920 --> 00:46:52.470
And the treaty agreements is
what we should be getting,
00:46:52.470 --> 00:46:53.740
but we're not getting.
00:46:56.100 --> 00:47:00.420
- So we have legal documentation,
we have the agreements,
00:47:00.420 --> 00:47:04.100
we have research, expert research,
00:47:04.100 --> 00:47:08.460
and we really have a lot of say here.
00:47:08.460 --> 00:47:11.820
We actually have consent as opposed to
00:47:11.820 --> 00:47:13.320
free prior informed consent
00:47:13.320 --> 00:47:15.630
under the United Nations declaration
00:47:15.630 --> 00:47:17.970
and United Nations Declaration
00:47:17.970 --> 00:47:22.170
on the Rights of Indigenous
People has a clause, clause 46,
00:47:22.170 --> 00:47:27.170
which allows for the government
or the main government,
00:47:28.230 --> 00:47:29.970
Canadian government to have a veto
00:47:29.970 --> 00:47:32.520
over in the best interest of the state.
00:47:32.520 --> 00:47:37.470
So we assert this whole
territory as it is ours.
00:47:37.470 --> 00:47:40.020
And on the left here is our wind farm.
00:47:40.020 --> 00:47:42.090
This is our second largest wind farm.
00:47:42.090 --> 00:47:45.030
And we have 11 wind turbines here.
00:47:45.030 --> 00:47:49.020
It's a good revenue stream
for us, but this is our land.
00:47:49.020 --> 00:47:51.630
We partnered 50% with a company,
00:47:51.630 --> 00:47:56.250
and we get an annual return
through a business relationship.
00:47:56.250 --> 00:47:59.210
So what we do is that we put out
00:47:59.210 --> 00:48:02.640
an assertion of jurisdiction
in our territory
00:48:02.640 --> 00:48:05.250
from here to Packasaw
saying that any proponent,
00:48:05.250 --> 00:48:07.560
any developer, if it's not in a treaty,
00:48:07.560 --> 00:48:09.540
that we compromise, that it's still ours,
00:48:09.540 --> 00:48:11.820
and if you want some of that action,
00:48:11.820 --> 00:48:13.260
you need our permission.
00:48:13.260 --> 00:48:16.010
(engine humming)
00:48:17.490 --> 00:48:18.690
- You know, that's our livelihood,
00:48:18.690 --> 00:48:22.380
hunting, trapping, fishing,
living off the land.
00:48:22.380 --> 00:48:25.470
And that's what they were
doing then, and you know,
00:48:25.470 --> 00:48:26.930
we're still doing it today.
00:48:36.810 --> 00:48:38.880
- We recently lost one of our grandmothers
00:48:38.880 --> 00:48:43.880
that has been trying to
let our people know as well
00:48:44.190 --> 00:48:46.480
about those responsibilities.
00:48:46.480 --> 00:48:49.140
You know, she traveled
around the Great Lakes
00:48:49.140 --> 00:48:51.630
and walked around the Great Lakes.
00:48:51.630 --> 00:48:55.230
I don't know how many times
she's done this for our people.
00:48:55.230 --> 00:48:57.810
And that's to ensure
that our people are aware
00:48:57.810 --> 00:49:00.030
that we have a
responsibility to that lake.
00:49:03.000 --> 00:49:04.680
Many people have picked up on that
00:49:04.680 --> 00:49:06.420
and know what she was doing
00:49:06.420 --> 00:49:08.070
and know the work that
she was undertaking,
00:49:08.070 --> 00:49:10.620
because you'll see many of our people
00:49:10.620 --> 00:49:12.080
out in the different communities
00:49:12.080 --> 00:49:15.720
taking on that responsibility
and doing the water walks.
00:49:16.860 --> 00:49:20.070
And those waterwalks
are to let people know,
00:49:20.070 --> 00:49:23.280
the settler governments
know, that we're still here
00:49:23.280 --> 00:49:25.380
and we're still doing the jobs
00:49:25.380 --> 00:49:27.720
that the great Creator asked us to do
00:49:27.720 --> 00:49:29.490
by being respectful to the lakes.
00:49:33.330 --> 00:49:36.760
- It's something that
has been in our band,
00:49:36.760 --> 00:49:40.050
in our way of life, living on the water.
00:49:40.050 --> 00:49:43.590
We're water people, we're
boat people since time began.
00:49:43.590 --> 00:49:45.950
So it's very important.
00:49:45.950 --> 00:49:49.560
I touched on the
responsibility of the resource,
00:49:49.560 --> 00:49:53.970
and that's something that we
pound into the younger guys,
00:49:53.970 --> 00:49:57.180
you know, to be responsible,
to respect that.
00:50:01.320 --> 00:50:04.390
- And the Batchewana people, you know,
00:50:04.390 --> 00:50:07.800
know their heritage in regard to fishery,
00:50:07.800 --> 00:50:10.260
and we've never, ever,
we've always managed
00:50:10.260 --> 00:50:11.700
the fishery ourselves.
00:50:11.700 --> 00:50:14.790
It's been, it is documented
by the newcomer governments
00:50:14.790 --> 00:50:16.860
back from the 1600s.
00:50:16.860 --> 00:50:21.690
So our people have sufficient
right to manage the fishery.
00:50:23.640 --> 00:50:26.040
The economic boost to the communities,
00:50:26.040 --> 00:50:28.170
I think, is what's gotta be mentioned.
00:50:28.170 --> 00:50:30.600
I think it's beneficial
for our communities.
00:50:30.600 --> 00:50:32.760
It means employment for a
lot of the young people.
00:50:32.760 --> 00:50:35.310
It means employment as well for,
00:50:35.310 --> 00:50:37.650
I don't know how many people
around the crew that they have,
00:50:37.650 --> 00:50:40.200
with the tugs that they
have, but, you know,
00:50:40.200 --> 00:50:43.740
it means an awful lot to
our community members.
00:50:47.070 --> 00:50:50.660
- I have a lot of people
that come up and tell me
00:50:50.660 --> 00:50:55.390
how nice it is to see a native fishery
00:50:57.320 --> 00:51:00.960
be equal to some of the
non-native fisheries.
00:51:00.960 --> 00:51:03.420
So I think I have 15 employees now
00:51:03.420 --> 00:51:05.730
that work and collect
the paycheck from us.
00:51:05.730 --> 00:51:10.200
90% of these guys, these
employees are band members.
00:51:10.200 --> 00:51:13.560
I don't discriminate,
but these are the guys
00:51:13.560 --> 00:51:14.510
that want to do it.
00:51:15.370 --> 00:51:17.190
They're getting harder to find,
00:51:17.190 --> 00:51:21.930
but the ones I have are probably
the best on Lake Superior.
00:51:21.930 --> 00:51:23.520
I bet the farm on it.
00:51:24.570 --> 00:51:26.430
We do really good work.
00:51:29.610 --> 00:51:32.730
We're now selling whole
fish into Michigan.
00:51:32.730 --> 00:51:35.070
Everything else is sold locally.
00:51:35.070 --> 00:51:37.320
We do all of the Sault area.
00:51:38.610 --> 00:51:41.580
Little bit towards Sudbury,
little bit towards Wawa.
00:51:41.580 --> 00:51:42.630
I don't wanna tell you everything,
00:51:42.630 --> 00:51:45.420
because some of these markets
took us a long time to get!
00:51:45.420 --> 00:51:47.220
- I was telling you
that might be the case!
00:51:47.220 --> 00:51:49.390
(both laugh)
00:51:49.390 --> 00:51:51.360
- Our fishermen do have market.
00:51:51.360 --> 00:51:54.150
As a matter of fact, our own community
00:51:54.150 --> 00:51:55.590
is also in the market.
00:51:55.590 --> 00:51:58.590
Like we have a fish fry up
here at the arena on Fridays,
00:51:58.590 --> 00:52:02.190
and it's almost sold out
every time we have one,
00:52:02.190 --> 00:52:04.350
It's all supplied by our own fishermen.
00:52:07.380 --> 00:52:08.970
- You put the filet over
there, it'll come through,
00:52:08.970 --> 00:52:11.640
there's little blades that spins,
00:52:11.640 --> 00:52:13.830
catches the pin bone and plucks them.
00:52:15.060 --> 00:52:17.370
And of course we go through
everything by hand, again,
00:52:17.370 --> 00:52:18.780
to make sure,
00:52:18.780 --> 00:52:20.850
one of our slogans is no bones about it.
00:52:20.850 --> 00:52:22.680
There's no bones in our fish.
00:52:22.680 --> 00:52:24.580
We take a lot of pride in saying that.
00:52:26.730 --> 00:52:29.670
the community has respect
for fishermen here.
00:52:29.670 --> 00:52:32.070
They have a lot of
respect for us fishermen
00:52:32.070 --> 00:52:34.650
who do this for a living
because it's hard work.
00:52:39.630 --> 00:52:40.460
- Beauty!
00:52:45.420 --> 00:52:48.870
- My name's Dylan Agweo Agawa.
00:52:48.870 --> 00:52:50.840
My Indian name is (speaking in Ojibwe).
00:52:57.430 --> 00:53:00.350
And here's my boat, the Lil' Snick.
00:53:04.860 --> 00:53:08.070
- I am a commercial
fisherman of Lake Superior.
00:53:08.070 --> 00:53:12.720
I am 21 years old, own a
commercial fishing vessel
00:53:12.720 --> 00:53:14.640
called the Lil' Snick.
00:53:14.640 --> 00:53:17.780
I'm proud to where I am today.
00:53:17.780 --> 00:53:20.450
(waves lapping)
00:53:21.970 --> 00:53:24.470
(engine revs)
00:53:30.740 --> 00:53:31.890
- I was asking the Creator for
00:53:31.890 --> 00:53:35.670
just enough to have a good feed.
00:53:40.020 --> 00:53:43.920
This is the pin bone, it's
got a little pin bone there
00:53:43.920 --> 00:53:48.920
inside the fish and it
grows in there like a C,
00:53:49.740 --> 00:53:52.650
So you gotta take it, and I
usually tell my customers,
00:53:52.650 --> 00:53:54.300
that if you find a bone, bring it back,
00:53:54.300 --> 00:53:56.300
and I'll give you another piece of fish.
00:53:57.600 --> 00:54:00.360
And I have never had
anybody come back with bone.
00:54:03.480 --> 00:54:07.460
- I'm watching for any
boaters, where aim is
00:54:07.460 --> 00:54:12.030
and where we're going,
what's our next destination?
00:54:12.030 --> 00:54:14.910
Well, I have my
grandfather that's with me.
00:54:14.910 --> 00:54:17.280
And you know, I'm thankful
every day that he's there,
00:54:17.280 --> 00:54:18.110
because you know what?
00:54:18.110 --> 00:54:21.840
He's show me what he
showed his son up the lake
00:54:21.840 --> 00:54:25.770
and, you know, it's not
his first boat that he ran,
00:54:25.770 --> 00:54:30.030
and you know, you kinda, you
know, sometimes you butt heads,
00:54:30.030 --> 00:54:32.220
but you know, sometimes you
have to realize, you know,
00:54:32.220 --> 00:54:37.220
time to stay quiet and just
listen, because he is right.
00:54:38.520 --> 00:54:41.610
He is right in his age, and
that's why he is here today.
00:54:45.870 --> 00:54:48.630
And I have my uncle, my uncle Tony.
00:54:49.790 --> 00:54:53.700
And that's Seagull's oldest brother.
00:54:53.700 --> 00:54:58.230
That's the first born son is Tony,
00:54:58.230 --> 00:55:00.600
but his real name's Percy Junior,
00:55:00.600 --> 00:55:02.310
but everybody calls him Tony.
00:55:03.960 --> 00:55:08.460
But now, since I worked
with him when I was small
00:55:08.460 --> 00:55:11.900
and now since I have my
own bigger operation,
00:55:11.900 --> 00:55:14.430
works with me now, and you know,
00:55:14.430 --> 00:55:16.410
I'm just as happy to have him on my boat
00:55:16.410 --> 00:55:18.990
because, you know, it
reminds me of the good times
00:55:18.990 --> 00:55:20.700
that we used to have together
00:55:20.700 --> 00:55:23.220
going out there fishing and, you know,
00:55:23.220 --> 00:55:25.710
coming in with a boat load of fish
00:55:25.710 --> 00:55:27.390
with a big smile on our faces,
00:55:27.390 --> 00:55:29.960
because we did good on
that day of fishing.
00:55:29.960 --> 00:55:31.920
That's what I like about fishing.
00:55:31.920 --> 00:55:35.010
It's just, you never know
what you're gonna run into
00:55:35.010 --> 00:55:36.810
when you're on the lake
00:55:36.810 --> 00:55:39.020
or you never know what
you're gonna catch either.
00:55:40.440 --> 00:55:43.230
- Sometimes I'll have two guys helping me
00:55:43.230 --> 00:55:45.810
and their families like, you
know, everybody's depending
00:55:45.810 --> 00:55:50.430
on me to make sure we keep going
00:55:50.430 --> 00:55:55.430
and being a go-getter and
getting, harvesting the fish
00:55:55.770 --> 00:55:58.920
and then also processing
the fish is another thing
00:55:58.920 --> 00:56:02.470
that I got pretty good at.
00:56:02.470 --> 00:56:04.620
I know how to filet a fish pretty good.
00:56:04.620 --> 00:56:07.020
I learned that off, my Aust
Mariam actually taught me
00:56:07.020 --> 00:56:09.330
the very first time how to filet a fish.
00:56:09.330 --> 00:56:12.330
And I carry that knowledge with me today.
00:56:12.330 --> 00:56:17.330
And that's what I pride
my work on is making sure
00:56:17.640 --> 00:56:21.630
that that fish is best
quality that it can be.
00:56:22.620 --> 00:56:27.620
- My hope for my people is
we take all our land back,
00:56:27.840 --> 00:56:30.540
start looking after it like
Mother Earth wanted us to,
00:56:32.400 --> 00:56:37.400
because money isn't gonna do
you any good when you're dead.
00:56:38.370 --> 00:56:43.370
If Mother Earth kills you,
it's not gonna do any good.
00:56:45.780 --> 00:56:47.100
You're can have all
the money in the world,
00:56:47.100 --> 00:56:50.100
but you're gonna die like everybody else
00:56:50.100 --> 00:56:52.590
when she wants you to.
00:56:54.360 --> 00:56:57.090
But like our treaty agreements,
00:56:57.090 --> 00:57:00.930
if we could even get that
back, the real treaty, I mean,
00:57:00.930 --> 00:57:02.880
not the treaty that the government got.
00:57:03.750 --> 00:57:05.100
If we could get that in place
00:57:05.100 --> 00:57:08.060
and get things worked out that way,
00:57:08.060 --> 00:57:09.420
our people would be good,
00:57:09.420 --> 00:57:12.680
because we'd be in control
of our land and territory.
00:57:21.890 --> 00:57:23.400
- Very simple.
00:57:23.400 --> 00:57:25.060
Go on that side.
00:57:25.060 --> 00:57:25.890
Okay.
00:57:32.350 --> 00:57:33.540
3.5 pounds, so.
00:57:40.440 --> 00:57:42.900
Might as well have like a
whole of truck load of fish,
00:57:42.900 --> 00:57:46.890
and then you will
different parts in the zoo.
00:57:46.890 --> 00:57:47.720
No salmon.
00:57:47.720 --> 00:57:50.460
No, just lake trout and whitefish.
00:57:50.460 --> 00:57:51.290
- [Customer] Okay, thank you.
00:57:51.290 --> 00:57:52.380
- Is that good there?
00:57:54.180 --> 00:57:55.020
Oh, you got cookies.
00:57:55.020 --> 00:57:55.950
Oh, awesome.
00:57:55.950 --> 00:57:56.790
Even a better deal.
00:57:56.790 --> 00:57:57.620
Thank you!
00:57:57.620 --> 00:57:59.790
- Cool.
- Thank you, bye.
00:57:59.790 --> 00:58:01.190
- And that's how easy it is.
00:58:06.630 --> 00:58:09.300
- When we, as the original
peoples of these lands,
00:58:09.300 --> 00:58:11.640
have a strong position in
regards to the fisheries
00:58:11.640 --> 00:58:15.570
on Lake Superior, that
is non compromising.
00:58:15.570 --> 00:58:17.480
And we can't allow that to be compromised
00:58:17.480 --> 00:58:20.850
by only having one vote
out of 12 at a table.
00:58:20.850 --> 00:58:22.050
We will drive.
00:58:22.050 --> 00:58:23.430
It's our jurisdiction.
00:58:23.430 --> 00:58:25.410
We'll be in control.
00:58:25.410 --> 00:58:27.960
And we'll find a space
for people to advise us.
00:58:27.960 --> 00:58:30.300
And that's what it was
for us for a long time.
00:58:31.200 --> 00:58:34.110
The shoes on the other foot
now where we were always.
00:58:34.110 --> 00:58:36.110
okay, you were consulted,
get out of the way now,
00:58:36.110 --> 00:58:37.980
we're doing what we want.
00:58:37.980 --> 00:58:40.080
So it's not gonna be like that anymore.
00:58:40.080 --> 00:58:41.820
We're asserting jurisdiction
00:58:41.820 --> 00:58:44.910
and we have asserted jurisdiction
as the Anishinaabe people.
00:58:44.910 --> 00:58:48.510
- It's my hope before
I'm gone that, you know,
00:58:48.510 --> 00:58:51.310
all three governments, the First Nation,
00:58:51.310 --> 00:58:53.950
the federal, provincial government
00:58:53.950 --> 00:58:56.460
work together for the resource.
00:58:56.460 --> 00:58:59.760
I got grandsons coming up, granddaughters,
00:58:59.760 --> 00:59:02.210
so it'll be there so they can, you know,
00:59:02.210 --> 00:59:06.750
ride around this boat, other
boats, do their own thing.
00:59:06.750 --> 00:59:08.850
Why can't we make a living on, you know,
00:59:08.850 --> 00:59:11.910
the biggest lake there is in
the world and look after it?
00:59:12.930 --> 00:59:15.980
- I guess for the younger people,
00:59:15.980 --> 00:59:19.200
I often thought about
it because I see today
00:59:19.200 --> 00:59:21.810
where a lot of young people, people are,
00:59:23.430 --> 00:59:24.930
how do you wanna say it?
00:59:24.930 --> 00:59:28.740
You don't wanna say they're grasping,
00:59:28.740 --> 00:59:30.490
they're grasping out, reaching out.
00:59:31.650 --> 00:59:36.320
You know, I'm surprised,
because I sit back at times
00:59:36.320 --> 00:59:39.600
and I think about what I
just discussed with you
00:59:39.600 --> 00:59:41.760
and shared with you that story,
00:59:41.760 --> 00:59:44.010
that creation story part of it,
00:59:44.010 --> 00:59:48.570
and those types of
constitutional discussions
00:59:48.570 --> 00:59:50.910
that I've had with my
father sitting in the lodge.
00:59:50.910 --> 00:59:53.060
That's where those come
from for me, you know?
00:59:53.060 --> 00:59:56.730
And not only my father, but
other knowledge keepers as well.
00:59:56.730 --> 01:00:01.200
Aunties and uncles and people
from different communities,
01:00:01.200 --> 01:00:05.450
whether it's down in
Manitowoc island or Zegomacor.
01:00:05.450 --> 01:00:07.170
You know, people that I've
come to know in my life
01:00:07.170 --> 01:00:09.780
that are knowledge keepers that
speak Anishinaabe language.
01:00:09.780 --> 01:00:12.990
Those are the people that our young people
01:00:12.990 --> 01:00:17.130
need to continue to turn
to and learn those things.
01:00:18.000 --> 01:00:21.060
- When I was young,
everybody in the village
01:00:21.060 --> 01:00:24.390
learned how to fish,
everybody where I came from,
01:00:24.390 --> 01:00:27.060
and you'll notice a lot of the
elders will talk about that.
01:00:27.060 --> 01:00:28.680
I learned it from my dad.
01:00:28.680 --> 01:00:30.210
One of the things he told me
01:00:30.210 --> 01:00:34.230
was that if you know how to
fish, you'll never starve.
01:00:34.230 --> 01:00:38.480
He was born in 1921, so he
grew up in the depression.
01:00:41.250 --> 01:00:44.940
And he said that no
matter how tough it was,
01:00:44.940 --> 01:00:46.740
they could always trade fish.
01:00:46.740 --> 01:00:48.360
They could trade fish
for whatever they needed.
01:00:48.360 --> 01:00:50.340
They didn't need cash,
they didn't need money.
01:00:50.340 --> 01:00:52.980
And they lived a pretty good life,
01:00:52.980 --> 01:00:54.120
because they knew how to fish.
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