THE ABENAKIS
The
Abenaki are part of the Algonquian linguistic family. There are nearly 2,000
Abenaki in Quebec, of which 400 live on-reserve. Their territory is located
on the south shore of the Saint-Lawrence, near Trois-Rivières. There
are two Abenaki communities in Quebec: Odanak et Wolinak. In the past, the Abenaki
lived on hunting, fishing, trapping, small fruit gathering and cultivated corn,
beans, squash, potatoes and tobacco.
Did you know that, in Odanak, there is one of the most important
Native Museum in Quebec ?
ASH POUNDING, A UNIQUE TECHNIQUE
by Annabelle Dionne
According
to a legend, the Abenaki would have been born in an ash basket. If they were
not born in one, they have been making them for many generations. In the Odanak
community, they are about then people who are making ash baskets.
At
a coordinated rythm, they process the ash by hitting it with an ax, after taking
care of rounding the edge so not to split the wood. Afterwards, they delicately
separate the layers of wood in order to thin them towards making the baskets.
They then take off the rough layer of wood and let the long layers of ash created
to dry. Once dry, they are ready to be rolled up and sold to craftsmen.
«
Ash is getting very difficult to find », says Clément N'Sadoquos,
of the Odanak Band Council who had to get ash in Maniwaki, this year. Even if
its resource is becoming scarce, it does not decrease. An ash planting project
is currently in the process of materializing, in Odanak. "However, we must
wait some fifteen years prior to utilizing our own trees » .
The Abenakis
/
The Algonquins /
The Attikameks /
The
Crees
The Hurons-Wendat /
The Malecites /
The
Micmacs
The Mohawks /
The
Montagnais /
The Naskapis
/
The Inuits
|