Revised I loved you.I'm 33 yh It's the first time thanks that all responses are legitimate(name of nation, etc mikmaq@nativeculture.zzn.com; 206.133.78.64. 8/3/2000 925 http://www.nativeculture.com/B_Board/ListThem.asp
Extractions: Category CategoryValue Cultural Traditions Music Outdoors Spirituality Sports Pen Pals Current Events Education Family and Relationships Genealogy Humor Health Business, Jobs, Careers Movies, TV, Media TopicValue Topic CategoryValue Stories Language Powwows Prehistoric Artifacts Drum Groups Contemporary Native American Music Traditional Music Native American Flute Music Education Camping and Hiking Horses Prayers and Good Thoughts Hockey Baseball PenPal Wanted International PenPals Inter-Tribal PenPals Mascot Issue Repatriation Sovereignty Native American Holiday Native American Studies Character Education Child Development Elders Promoting Harmony Looking for Information Jokes Powwow Humor Prevention Job Seekers Technology Careers Equality in the Workplace Opportunities Current Films and TV Native Americans in Media 4/5/2000 2:48:31 PM Our company is seeking other Dakota media professionals...videographers, computer artists, editors, lighting designers, audio artists, musicians, scriptwriters, etc. Let us know who you are! Mona@alliesmediaart.com 4/25/2000 10:13:13 PM i play all instrument gcharly70@hotmail.com
Extractions: If you find a link which no longer works properly, or you wish to suggest a site for inclusion in this list, please let me know. The Abenaki Language a discussion of the language and some translations Ne-Do-Ba: Common Abenaki Words "The words in these lists have been collected from many sources, some are Western Abenaki and some are Eastern Abenaki"
Art ednet.ns.ca/cgibin/redirmu/educ/museum/mikmaq/. Salish artist of the Shi'sha'lth(Sechelt) nation. first nations and Inuit art including paintings, sculptures http://www.ad.com/Arts/Genres/__Native_American/
Northeast Wigwam mikmaq ancestors Richard 161858 02/17/03 (0) CHRIS Re MEMBERSHIP FOR NEW YORKBROTHERTOWN TRIBAL nation - STORM 1740 first Robin 075824 02/01/03 (0) Re http://www.newigwam.com/wwwboard/genealogy/index.shtml
Extractions: Choose another discussion board Arts / Crafts / Jewelry Education Gardening / Food / Recipes Genealogy Herbs and Medicine History Native American Issues Social Spirituality The Trading Post Note: Be sure to press your browser's Refresh or Reload button to view latest messages or posts. POST NEW MESSAGE Virginia can you help me - kim Daniel MOODY - Narragansett on land list RI, still searching for him - Mitty Searching for info. on Alice Emily Brand b. 1845 Conesville, NY - J. Clancy Guy down on luck could use short email of support - Taylor My grandmother's ancestry - Bonnie Wilmot (FAfahfui) Information If you have on the (Niles), your decendent and others too.
Responses In Support Of First Nations Activities At Burnt Church Ironically, the mikmaq and all other first nations in Canada have lived this exactscenario Beckie Labillois ERB first nation. We are the first nationS PEOPLE. http://www.rism.org/isg/dlp/bc/perspectives/pasta.htm
Extractions: I am a Indian Brook band member and I am writing to comment on the fishing dispute that has been going on the past few months. I have gone to Digby to the wharf that the band members from Indian Brook have been fishing off for the past two years and I sat back and watched the DFO boats out in the water watching every move of the fishermen. I feel that my people should be able to fish when they want and where they want. The government signed over treaties and they didn't have a problem with it then, but now we are fighting for the right that is ours and we shouldn't have to fight for it. The natives were the first ones here in Canada and we should be telling the non-native fishermen where to fish and when to fish not them telling us when and where to fish. I feel that is not right. Why can't everyone get along? Racism has been going on for the past few hundred years and it probably will go for the next hundread years. Jolene Marr
Google Search: Wampum, Language www.ednet.ns.ca/educ/museum/mikmaq/glossary.htm Cached first nations peoples developedlanguage, traditions and of NY News in a visit to the Oneida nation. http://www.sidis.net/Google Search wampum, language.htm
Guestfm.htm I'm very interested in first American Spirituality My children are part Onondaga fromthe Iroquois nation so i I am mikmaq what information can I get from your http://members.aol.com/ladyscribe/indig/guestfm.htm
Extractions: Welcome to everyone! Lulu May 11, 1998 13:15 http://members.aol.com/nascswan/NASC.html Scribe, It is a pleasure to see that you are putting up a set of pages which will be both educational and informational. There are few who care enough to do the research involved in varifying a sites "validity". I write this in hopes that people will see you are making this attempt but are only human and too, will then have to rely upon thier help in maintaining the integrity of your site. I hope all who enter here will remember that it is as easy to find and offer solution as it is to complain. You have a large and life-long task in front of you with this responsibility you have chosen for yourself. I commend you as so many are always waiting to find that which they are responsible for while others seek that which become as their children. You must have broad shoulders for this project. I thank you for taking the time to care. Lulu
PEACE PARTY - Stereotype Of The Month Contest Domain name search equates mikmaq and red bans city workers from Oneida Nationfirms School calls Indians treacherous, cruel first americans parade float http://www.bluecorncomics.com/stype01.htm
Extractions: Reproduced, with permission, from: Roy, B. K., and D. K. Miller. 1985. The rights of indigenous peoples in international law: An annotated bibliography. Saskatchewan: University of Saskatchewan Native Law Centre. Alfredsson, Gudmundur. "International Law, International Organizations and Indigenous Peoples." (1982), 36 Journal of International Affairs The author analyzes the remedies and avenues for redress available in international law and organizations for human rights violations against indigenous peoples. He also examines specific provisions in the Charter of the United Nations relating to the domestic jurisdiction rule and argues that most states could not successfully invoke this rule because, as parties to international agreements, they have consented to the competence of others to discuss state performance in areas covered by the agreements. The author also examines the principle of the right to self-determination and puts forth five possible meanings and potential beneficiaries. He concludes that most indigenous peoples are excluded from the exercise of external self-determination partly because of the territorial and sovereignty arguments advanced by metropolitan states. He asserts, however, that this does not mean that internal self-determination does not apply. American Indian Law Centre. "Special Issue." (1974), 7
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF THE CARIBOO and political relationships with Louisbourg, the mikmaq, and the want to travel toBritish Columbia in the first place Where and how the Métis nation originated http://www.cariboo.bc.ca/ae/php/hist/beshaw/H112_Autumn_2001_outline.htm
Extractions: UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF THE CARIBOO Department of Philosophy, History and Politics History 112 (Sec.02) Dr. John Belshaw Phone: 828-5171 Office: AE 341 e-mail: belshaw@cariboo.bc.ca AN INTRODUCTION TO CANADIAN HISTORY (2,1,0) COURSE CONTENT: This course deals with the evolution of Canada to 1867. In this section an emphasis will be placed on the interaction between European nations and Aboriginal nations, on relations between colonial powers, on the character of the society of New France, and on the first hundred years of British North America. EVALUATIONS: Nota Bene ("Observe Well"): Assignments are due at the start of class, not throughout the day or later in the evening. Please respect the word limits indicated above. Only under exceptional and documented circumstances will late papers be accepted. All components of the course must be completed, however poorly, in order to pass or fail the course. Students who do not complete a component of the evaluated work will receive a DNC. If you ever hope to get a student loan this matters The summaries will be collected only at the seminars. Attend prepared to discuss and with summaries in hand every week and, like Gloria Gaynor, you
DoCip - Update No. 36 Regional Authority; Treaty Six first nation; Union of Leonard Peltier Defense Committee;mikmaq Grand Council Minorities (Kuiu Kwaan Thlingit nation and other http://www.docip.org/anglais/update_en/up_en_36.html
Extractions: Centro de Documentación, Investigación e Información de los Pueblos Indígenas The establishment of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues on 29 July 2000 represents a great step forward for the worlds indigenous peoples: they have succeeded, within the framework of the United Nations, in placing the promotion of and respect for their rights at a level seldom reached by organizations not directly reporting to States. It is also a legitimate advance towards the recognition of their holistic approach of their rights as expressed by the right to self-determination. This right includes the various issues specifically dealt with by the organizations of the UN system, which in most cases report directly to the ECOSOC. Two reports on the work undertaken by the indigenous delegates in New York have been distributed by e-mail. As soon as we received the first one, we asked the author to
APTN | Aboriginal Peoples Television Network one of 'People to People nation to nation' - that all we do keeping out of the wayto let first People deal contact dialogue on CONTACT ..as a mikmaq woman I http://www.aptn.ca/en/ContactCurrentAffairs/Archives20012002/24Feb02_html
Extractions: Not provided thanks rick this reminds us of redwire magazine, uncensored, we the native people have been shut down for so long and now we are speaking out. this is our time. so what if a few white racists got in, let them have their jollies. its nothing we don't see every day. if you are squeamish louise then there are other mesaage boards you acn go to. Name:
Vindex, De Vindplaats Van Het Nederlandse Web SocietyEthnicityIndigenous PeopleNative AmericansTribes, nations and BandsFederationsWabanaki.Links, http//www.mikmaq.net/. Miawpukek first nation. http://www.vindex.nl/dir/Society/Ethnicity/Indigenous_People/Native_Americans/Tr
Extractions: Gevonden in rubriek: Society Ethnicity Indigenous People Native Americans ... Míkmaq Omschrijving: Tribal council incorporated under the Nova Scotia Societies Act on 3 July 1970 to provide a unified political voice for the Míkmaq people. Seven of the thirteen Míkmaq Bands in Nova Scotia are represented: Eskasoni, Membertou, Wagmatcook, Waycobah, Chapel Island, Shubenacadie and Acadia. http://www.unsi.ns.ca/
EventsCurrent Our Country' Defining the Ethnic nation in Toronto's French Activism, British Neglect,and mikmaq Resistance on The Journal's first issue will be published in http://www.yale.edu/yale300/events/seminars/EventsCurrent.htm
Extractions: For the Love of God: 300 Years of Theological Education [Convocation/Reunion] 1 October 4 October 2001 Divinity School: Every year during the fall semester reading week, Yale Divinity School and Berkley Divinity School at Yale, hold the Annual Convocation which combines and features endowed lectureships. In honor of Yale's Tercentennial, Convocation will be held one week earlier, present and former faculty at the School and University are the Convocation lecturers. For more information, call 203-432-5303. Democratic Vistas, Global Perspectives [Symposium] 5 - 6 October 2001 A Tercentennial Symposium Click here for a schedule. "Democratic Vistas" was designed as the Tercentennial DeVane Lecture series for Spring 2001. The lectures borrowed their title from a classic essay by Walt Whitman, in which he suggested that the dignity and potential of the individual is well worth the sense of chaos at times associated with democracy. Six of the original fifteen lectures in this series will be presented again today for the Tercentennial weekend.* The second part of this symposium, "Global Perspectives," draws on the September anniversary program organized by the Yale Center for International and Area Studies. Ernesto Zedillo, '81 Ph.D., former President of Mexico, will initiate the discussions with a keynote lecture on "Envisioning the World in the Next Century: Challenges to a Global University." Participants have the opportunity to join some of our most prominent internationalist faculty in discussing the key challenges we face entering the next century.
EventsCurrent Ironies French Activism, British Neglect, and mikmaq Resistance on the Act, Whitmanin 1855 in the first edition of with the survival of the nation and its http://www.yale.edu/yale300/events/date/EventsCurrent.htm
Extractions: ARCHIVES OCTOBER '00 NOVEMBER '00 DECEMBER '00 ... NOVEMBER '01 Ongoing History of Student Research [Exhibits] Through - October 2001 School of Medicine: History of the Student Thesis at Yale. Sterling Hall of Medicine. Free and open to the public. Sterling Hall of Medicine, Medical Library, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT Mon - Fri 8:30 a.m. - 12 noon, Sat 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Sun 10 a.m. - noon United Nations Oral History Collection at Yale [Exhibits] Through 2 November 2001 Call 432-1735 for more information. Sterling Memorial Library High Street William C. DeVane Lectures - Ideals Without Ideologies: Yale's Contribution to Modern Architecture Robert A.M. Stern, Dean School of Architecture [Lectures] Through - 10 December 2001 DeVane Lectures/School of Architecture: This series of lectures, given by Robert A.M. Stern, Dean of the School of Architecture and six guest speakers, will examine post World War II architecture through the lens of the Yale School of Architecture, where key issues of architectural modernity, especially the conflicting relationship between European and American modalities of thought and practice, were vividly portrayed and debated in the classroom, studio and in the work of leading faculty and graduates. For more information, please call 203-432-2889 or email jennifer.castellon@yale.edu
Extractions: AND COMPARATIVE LAW ANNUAL WAR DRUMS WAITING: WHY THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY SHOULD CONCERN ITSELF WITH THE RIGHTS OF BORDER TRIBES Jonty Lea Kasku-Jackson Indigenous Nations have the right of self-determination, in accordance with international law, and by virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development without external interference Since the 1980s indigenous peoples have asserted their rights more frequently and more vigorously, and have gained increasing domestic and international recognition. As a result they are becoming increasingly sophisticated, are developing networks and alliances in support and aid of each other, and are better able to assert their claims. The indigenous peoples of North America are quite politically sophisticated. The Aboriginals of Canada and the Indians of the United States are among the best organized and assertive indigenous peoples of the world. These peoples enjoy a unique status under the domestic laws of their surrounding states and claim the right of self-determination. Some of the tribes are bifurcated by the Canadian-United States border and exist in both countries. Each State is responsible not only for its treatment of the indigenous groups within its border, but must also concern itself to some degree with its neighbor's indigenous groups. Thus, claims to self-determination by those peoples have repercussions for North America as a whole, as well as for Canada and the United States individually. More importantly, the way that each State treats its indigenous peoples may also have international consequences.
[INDONESIA-L] Protecting Indigenous national Council (Canada) mikmaq nation (Canada) Miskitu nation (Canada) Senecanation (United States Shoal Lake Ojibway first nation (Canada) Shuar http://www.hamline.edu/apakabar/basisdata/1997/09/13/0006.html
New Acquisitions Russia's first civil war the Time of Troubles and The mikmaq resistance, accomodation,and cultural survival. The American people creating a nation and a http://www.ubishops.ca/library_info/new-acq.htm
Extractions: Bishop's University Library NEW ACQUISITIONS DECEMBER 2002 - MARCH 2003 The following list includes new titles received and catalogued during the months of December 2002, January, February 2003. A printout of this list is also available at the Circulation desk. For comments and suggestions, you may get in touch with Ms. Karen Thorneloe (ext. 2607)
Faculty Of Laws Website - University Of Malta Burger, J., The Gaia Atlas of first Peoples a See Richard Griggs, The Meaning ofnation and State This theme was continued by the mikmaq delegation to http://home.um.edu.mt/laws/test/mjhr/washington.html
Extractions: 1. Definition and characteristics of indigenous peoples in light of U.N. documents and practice 1.1. Introduction By most accounts, the number of indigenous peoples in the world today number between 250 to 300 million, or upwards to 600 million if the distinct peoples of Africa are included. Taking these figures into consideration, indigenous peoples comprise between 5% - 10% of the worlds population and can be found on every continent. Common threats concerning the plight of indigenous peoples include: environmental degradation, deforestation, tourism, weapons testing, militarization, cultural breakdown, colonization, invasion, mining projects, and a host of others ills. Although for many years victimized, indigenous peoples are increasingly raising their voices to draw attention to their situation on a national and international level. A significant United Nations (U.N.) action towards examining the plight of indigenous peoples occurred in May 1982 with the formation of the U.N. Working Group on Indigenous Populations (WGIP). The WGIP was formed pursuant to Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) resolution 1982/34, of May 7, 1982 which authorized the group composed of five members from the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities. The WGIPs dual mandate is to: 1) review developments pertaining to the promotion and protection of the human rights of indigenous populations; and 2) develop standards concerning the rights of indigenous populations. The WGIP has met annually since its inception in 1982.
1998 AISESnet Discussion: Wotanging Ikche--nanews06.034 near Quebec City, between native Affairs Minister At a news conference Thursday, Mikmaqnegotiator Alison Mitchell Listuguj Mi'gmaq first nation Government PO http://aises.uthscsa.edu/discussion/1998/0148.html