Métis people (Canada)
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Métis |
---|
Total population |
307,845 |
Regions with significant populations |
Canada, United States |
Languages |
English, Métis French, Michif, Bungee (extinct) |
Religions |
Predominantly Roman Catholic, Protestant [2] |
Related ethnic groups |
French, Cree, Ojibwa, Acadians, Cajuns, Scots, English |
The Métis are descendants of marriages of Cree, Ojibway, Saulteaux, and Menominee aboriginals to French Canadians, Scots and English, and are one of three recognized Aboriginal peoples in Canada, along with the First Nations (Indians) and Inuit (Eskimo). Commonly pronounced /ˈmeɪtiː/ "MAY-tee" or "may-TEE" in English [3], IPA: [meˈtsɪs] in Quebec French, [meˈtis] in Standard French,[4] [mɪˈtʃɪf] in Michif, they are also historically known as Bois Brûlé, mixed-bloods, or Countryborn (Anglo-Métis). Their homeland consists of the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec, as well as the Northwest Territories. The Métis Homeland also includes parts of the northern United States (specifically Montana, North Dakota, and northwest Minnesota).[5]
Their history dates to the mid-seventeenth century. The Métis spoke or still speak either Métis French or a mixed language called Michif. Michif is a phonetic spelling of the Métis pronunciation of Métif, a variant of Métis. The Métis today predominantly speak English, with French a strong second language, as well as numerous aboriginal tongues. Métis French is best preserved in Canada, Michif in the U.S., notably in the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation of North Dakota, where Michif is the official language. The encouragement and use of Métis French and Michif is growing due to outreach within the provincial Métis councils after at least a generation of decline.
The word Métis (the singular, plural and adjectival forms are the same) is French, and a cognate of the Spanish word mestizo. It carries the same connotation of "mixed race"; traced back far enough it stems from the Latin word mixtus, the past participle of the verb "to mix".
Countless Métis over time are thought to have been absorbed and assimilated into the surrounding populations making Métis heritage (and thereby aboriginal ancestry) more common than sometimes realized. Recent research and DNA analysis has often shown forgotten aboriginal lineages in many people of French Canadian and Acadian descent.
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[edit] Métis culture
Métis culture is a mixture of cultures of the First Nations and French Canada. The Métis are known for fiddle playing, but traditional Métis instruments also include the concertina, the harmonica, and the hand drum. Fiddle is often accompanied by a form of dancing referred to as jigging. Traditionally, dancing included such moves as the Waltz Quadrille, the Square dance, Drops of Brandy, the Duck, La Double Gigue and the Red River Jig.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (The RCMP) Musical Ride may have been inspired by the Métis practice of exercising their horses to the music of the jig and square dance. In the evenings after buffalo hunts, the Métis exercised their horses to music in the fashion of a square dance while the fiddler played quadrilles (a square dance still performed by Métis dancers). Their skilled horsemanship was easily adapted for bronc busting, calf roping and range riding, skills put to use in the development of ranches in the west.
As Métis culture developed, a new language called Michif emerged. This language was a result of the combining of French nouns and Cree verbs. Though a distinct language, it is now spoken by only about 1,000.
Of the clothing worn by Métis in the 19th century, the sash or Ceinture fléchée is probably the most common today. It is traditionally roughly three metres in length and is made of finger-woven yarn. The sash is worn around the waist, tied in the middle, with the fringed ends hanging. Vests with characteristic Métis figurative beadwork are also popular. The Red River Coat is historically recognized as coming from the Métis culture.
The Métis figured prominently in the history of Canada, having been very valuable and indispensable fur traders, voyageurs (coureur des bois), frontiersmen, pioneers, and middlemen who communicated between the First Nations peoples and the European settlers and colonialists. Well known for their tracking, guiding, and interpretive skills, Métis were often employed by the Northwest Mounted Police, as they are today by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Their large early contribution to Canada's evolution and formation as a nation has often been underestimated or downplayed by historians.
Métis people took traditions from both of their parents and developed a culture of their own. In recent times, some believe that the European elements have taken prominence, as racial discrimination against the Métis population lead many to hide their ethnicity and assimilate into Canadian society[citation needed].
[edit] Métis spirituality
A common misconception is that the Métis practiced only the religion of their fathers (Catholicism or Protestantism).[citation needed] However, the spiritual mixture of the Métis is in actuality as complex as the people who make up the nation.
Early on, Métis children absorbed the teachings of both their parents. Those teachings were made up of the father's religious background and the traditional teachings of the First Nation of the mother. Métis children thereby learned to live in both the Aboriginal and European worlds, encompassing both in their spirituality.
Today Métis practice many forms of religion, from mainline Christianity to New Age concepts and everything in between. From their Catholicism they have the Patron Saint of Métis People, St. Joseph of Nazareth. From their Aboriginal relatives they incorporate the sweat lodge, medicine wheel, sacred pipe, and Long House ceremonies, as well as many other Aboriginal spiritual beliefs. It is very common to encounter a prayer and a smudge at the opening and closing of meetings of Métis People.
Many Métis People, as with other Aboriginal communities, have lost their spiritual connections to the past because of marginalization, poverty, and decimation of their communities and their way of life. However, in modern times, renewal of spirituality occurs among many Métis.
[edit] Métis Identity
[edit] Legal Definition
There is substantial controversy and disagreement over who exactly is Métis. Unlike First Nations people, there is no distinction between status and non-status Métis and the legal definition itself is not yet fully developed. S.35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 makes mention of the Métis stating:
- 35(1) The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal people of Canada are hearby recognized and affirmed.
- (2) In this Act, "aboriginal peoples of Canada" includes the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada.
However, s.35(2) does not provide a definition of who is Métis, and until R. v. Powley in 2003, there was little development in such a definition. The case involved a claim by members of the Sault Ste. Marie community of northern Ontario, essentially dealing with asserted Métis hunting rights. The Supreme Court of Canada outlined three broad factors to identify Métis rights-holders:[6]
- self identification
- ancestral connection to a historic Métis community
- community acceptance
All three factors must be present to fit the legal definition of Métis, but there is still ambiguity. Questions about what constitutes a historic Métis community and what is sufficient proof of an ancestral connection (there is no blood quantum requirement) have not yet been answered by the courts.
[edit] Little 'm' métis versus big 'M' Métis
The term Métis was originally used to refer to French- and Cree-speaking descendents of the French-Catholic Red River Métis. Descendents of English or Scottish and natives were historically called 'half-breeds' or 'country born' and lived a more agrarian and Protestant lifestyle.[7] However, the term eventually evolved to refer to all 'half-breeds' whether linked to the historic Red River Métis or not.
Little 'm' métis refers to those who are of mixed native and other ancestry, and is essentially a racial definition. Big 'M' Métis refers to a particular sociocultural heritage and an ethnic self-identification that is not entirely racially based.[8] Some argue that people who identify as métis should not be included in the definition of 'Métis', and in fact, these people might not meet the legal test. Others have gone further and have suggested that only the descendents of the Red River Métis should be constitutionally recognised.[9] However, the effect of this limitation would see people such as the Labrador Métis, or Métis in British Columbia, excluded from the legal definition, and relegated to little 'm' métis status.
[edit] Prominent Métis
[edit] Historical individuals
- Toussaint Charbonneau, husband of Sacagawea, was Métis.
- Louis Riel led the Red River Rebellion in 1869 and the North-West Rebellion in 1885.[10]
- Cuthbert Grant, Métis leader
- Gabriel Dumont, Métis leader
[edit] Artists and writers
- Born in 1940, in northern Saskatchewan, Métis writer/filmmaker Maria Campbell brought the struggles of modern-day Métis and Aboriginal people into the public mind through her breakthrough book, Halfbreed (1973), and the collaborative play, Jessica (1982). She has captured the sound and song of traditional stories through her work in dialect, Stories of the Road Allowance People (1996).
- Novelist Sandra Birdsell is the daughter of a Métis man and a Russian Mennonite woman and based her award-winning novel Children of the Day in part on her parents' experiences in Manitoba in the 1920s-50s.
- MiLan Metis Healing Art Project - MMHAP
[edit] Politicians, activists, lawyers, and judges
- On May 7, 2004, Métis Todd Ducharme was appointed as a judge of the Ontario Supreme Court of Justice.
- Rabble.ca editor and Canadian anti-war movement leader Derrick O'Keefe is of partial Métis ancestry, and has Métis membership.
- British Columbia New Democratic Party Leader Carole James is of partial Métis ancestry.
- Former Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin has a mother of partial Métis ancestry.
[edit] Sportspeople
- Other well known Canadians of Métis descent are Sharon Bruneau, a female bodybuilder and fitness model, and Kevin O'Toole, 1996 North American Lightheavyweight bodybuilding champion.
- NHL star defenceman Sheldon Souray is of Métis ancestry.
- MMA fighter Kalib Starnes is also a Métis.
[edit] Others
- Architect Douglas Cardinal is of Métis and Blackfoot ancestry.
- Jon Gallant is bassist for the Canadian band Billy Talent.
[edit] See also
- Anglo-Metis (Countryborn)
- Métis people (USA)
- Alberta Act
- First Nations of Canada
- Métis National Council
[edit] Notes
- ^ [1] Statistics Canada, Census 2001 - Selected Ethnic Origins1, for Canada, Provinces and Territories - 20% Sample Data
- ^ [2] (Statistics Canada, Census 2001 - Selected Demographic and Cultural Characteristics (105), Selected Ethnic Groups (100), Age Groups (6), Sex (3) and Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3) for Population, for Canada, Provinces, Territories and Census Metropolitan Areas 1 , 2001 Census - 20% Sample Data)
- ^ http://www.othermetis.net/Wlcm.html The Other Métis
- ^ Petit Robert
- ^ Howard, James H. 1965. The Plains-Ojibwa or Bungi: hunters and warriors of the Northern Prairies with special reference to the Turtle Mountain band. University of South Dakota Museum Anthropology Papers 1 (Lincoln, Nebraska: J. and L. Reprint Co., Reprints in Anthropology 7, 1977).
- ^ (2003), 230 D.L.R. (4th) 1, 308 N.R. 201, 2003 SCC 43 [Powley]
- ^ . E. Foster, "The Metis: The People and the Term" (1978) 3 Prairie Forum 79 at 86-87.107
- ^ J. Brown, "Metis" in the Canadian Encyclopedia, vol. 2 (Edmonton: Hurtig, 1985) at 1124.
- ^ Paul L.A.H. Chartrand & John Giokas, "Defining 'the Métis People': The Hard Case of Canadian Aboriginal Law" in Paul L.A.H. Chartrand, ed., Who Are Canada's Aboriginal Peoples?: Recognition, Definition, and Jurisdiction (Saskatoon: Purich, 2002) 268 at 294
- ^ Reasonable doubts may be raised about whether either of these events was a rebellion. For example, the actions considered rebellious in 1869 were undertaken by Riel as the leader of a government recognized by Canada as in legitimate control of territory that did not belong to Canada; Canada negotiated the Manitoba Act with this government. After these "rebellions", land speculators and other non-Métis effectively deprived the Métis of land by exploiting a government program for its purchase, with the government perhaps turning a blind eye. The province of Alberta distributed land to Métis in 1938 to correct what it believed to be an inequity, but Saskatchewan and Manitoba have not followed Alberta's lead.
[edit] Further reading
- Barkwell, Lawrence J., Leah Dorion, and Audreen Hourie. Metis legacy Michif culture, heritage, and folkways. Metis legacy series, v. 2. Saskatoon: Gabriel Dumont Institute, 2006. ISBN 0920915809
- Barkwell, Lawrence J., Leah Dorion and Darren Prefontaine. Metis Legacy: A Historiography and Annotated Bibliography. Winnipeg: Pemmican Publications Inc. and Saskatoon: Gabriel Dumont Institute, 2001. ISBN 1-894717-03-1
- Chartrand, Larry N., Tricia E. Logan, and Judy D. Daniels. Métis History and Experience and Residential Schools in Canada. Aboriginal Healing Foundation research series. Ottawa: Aboriginal Healing Foundation, 2006. ISBN 1897285299
- Delaronde, Deborah L. Metis Spirits. Winnipeg: Pemmican Publications, 2006. ISBN 1894717368
- Douaud, Patrick C. The Western Métis Profile of a People. Canadian plains studies, 54. Regina: University of Regina, Canadian Plains Research Center, 2007. ISBN 9780889771994
- Goulet, George R. D., and Terry Goulet. The Metis Memorable Events and Memorable Personalities. Calgary: FabJob, 2006. ISBN 1894638980
- Jackson, John C. Children of the Fur Trade Forgotten Metis of the Pacific Northwest. Corvallis: Oregon State Univ Press, 2007. ISBN 0870711946
- McNab, David, and Ute Lischke. The Long Journey of a Forgotten People Métis Identities and Family Histories. Waterloo, Ont: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2007. ISBN 9780889205239
- National Aboriginal Health Organization. Métis Cookbook and Guide to Healthy Living. Ottawa, Ont: Métis Centre, National Aboriginal Health Organization, 2006. ISBN 0978078500
- National Council of Welfare (Canada), and Michelle M. Mann. First Nations, Métis and Inuit Children and Youth Time to Act. National Council of Welfare reports, v. #127. Ottawa: National Council of Welfare, 2007. ISBN 9780662466406
- Weinstein, John. Quiet Revolution West The Rebirth of Métis Nationalism. Calgary: Fifth House Publishers, 2007. ISBN 9781897252215
[edit] External links
[edit] Western Métis
- Métis National Council
- Métis Nation of Ontario
- Upper Canada Metis Family
- Manitoba Metis Federation
- Métis Nation-Saskatchewan
- Métis Nation of Alberta
- Métis Provincial Council of British Columbia
[edit] Eastern Métis
Metis of Maine.
[edit] Government of Canada
- Métis National Council Historical Online Database
- Canadian Genealogy Centre
- Differing Criteria for Métis
- Congress of Aboriginal Peoples
- Civilization.ca
- Métis - The Kids' Site of Canadian Settlement
- Indian Country Newspaper on Canada 2006 Government and Native peoples
[edit] Other
- A History of Aboriginal Treaties and Relations in Canada This site includes contextual materials, links to digitized primary sources and summaries of primary source documents.
- Métis Museum (Gabriel Dumont Institute)
- MiLan Metis Healing Art Project - MMHAP