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La Boîte Rouge VIF
Virtual Museum of Canada (VMC)
Ingenuity
  • Description

The Wolf’s Teaching

Lazar André. Tite McKenzie. Manish McKenzie. Laurent Jérôme
March 6, 2011
Schefferville

"When a wolf catches prey, it doesn't leave any meat."

Tite McKenzie, Innu

Four hundred years ago, there were no ovens or freezers. In the land, the ancestors couldn’t afford to waste. It was a matter of survival. The meat fed them and the fish broth gave them energy. The skin that was carefully detached was used to make clothing. In winter, the warm blood of the slaughtered animals warmed the hands and prevented frostbite. Everything has changed. Practices are lost and with them, knowledge. Tanning is long and laborious. Few women still do it. We no longer use all the parts of the animal. We get used to waste. We forgot about the wolf's teaching.

  • Description

Creative Shelters

May 23, 2011
Nunavik

Almost nothing! It takes almost nothing for Inuit to build a shelter made of materials that have been raked and assembled by chance. A few boards abandoned on a construction site, windows left aside after renovation work, plywood sheets recovered from the landfill, a door perhaps… They need almost nothing, but should we be surprised? Hadn't their ancestors learned to protect themselves from the elements through an ingenious arrangement of blocks?

  • Description

Whose Idea Was it?

Anishinabeg Elders
June 28, 2011
Pikogan

When my children were born, I never needed Pampers."

Une aînée, Anishinabe

Nature is generous, as long as you respect it, know how to use it and take the time to do so. Whose idea was it to work on moose hide, make it into sinew and use it to make snowshoes or carrying straps? Who first used hare skins to provide their family with blankets, mittens and stockings? Who was the first to use a bone to tan an animal's leather? Who was the first to use sphagnum to keep their baby dry? And who will do all of this when speed will have overwhelmed patience?

  • The Wolf’s Teaching
  • Creative Shelters
  • Whose Idea Was it?

Report of a recording made with Tite McKenzie, Lazar André and a woman. They’re butchering a caribou.

Woman

With this, you can make several dishes. You can boil it a little. You can make meat pies, stews too. But this one, you boil it. Caribou meat is all good... It's all good.

Tite McKenzie

Our ancestors kept everything. Everything. No waste.

Woman

You can make anything... You can make sausages too.

Interviewer

Oh! You keep everything, everything, everything, eh?

Lazar André

Usually, we even keep the skin as well.

Tite McKenzie

Like wolves. A wolf, when it kills his game, do you think it will leave food? It will eat everything and keep it all to himself. It's the same principle for the Innu.

Woman

When I prepare caribou meat, I prepare a bannock. There must always be a bannock.

Interviewer

So now, you're going to keep the hide too?

Woman

Yes!

Tite McKenzie

We're going to boil it!

Woman

No, the women do that.

Lazar André

Tanning the hide takes a long time. One of my aunts does traditional tanning.

Woman

You have to dry the hide. After that, you have to remove the meat that's there. From what I’ve seen with my aunt, it takes time. In the past, you see the blood that’s there, our ancestors used to take the blood and boil it.

Tite McKenzie

They’d do that... The blood at the bottom of the spine there, that blood was hot. We’d fight against the cold. We’d fight against the cold with it. They drank the caribou’s warm blood. And then, with the blood underneath, they’d put their hands there so they wouldn't freeze. Warm meat and blood protected against frostbite. In the past, our ancestors didn’t have knives. They would rip here. They followed the length of the leg. They took all this for hide. They didn't want to break the hide.

Lazar André

They used to make clothing with this.

Woman

I’ve already seen a hand-made hide. It was a child's suit. They made clothes out of it.

Interviewer

With caribou hide?

Woman

Yeah. There was a little suit.

[…]

Interviewer

We don't eat the lungs...

Tite McKenzie

No, the lungs were used for a mixture of brains mixed with lungs and blood to tan caribou hide and to soften caribou hide to make clothes.

Interviewer

To make it flexible.

Woman

During the summer, I saw it. I saw my aunt drying the hide and tanning it and softening it.

Tite McKenzie

Around 300, 400 years ago, there were no ovens, there were no microwaves. How do you think the Innu ate? Around a fire; to cook and boil fish, caribou, meat, partridges.... They boiled everything. From time to time they fried, but more often than not, they boiled the fish and they also drank the broth. Fish broth is fat, Omega-3. It’s meant to give you strength. Well, they used to drink the broth... it gave them plenty of energy! That's why they survived.

You don't waste anything. In the woods, you're afraid of running out of resources, so you keep everything, the bones too, especially the bones, it's very important.

Have you seen the amount of meat we get from caribou? Well, 500 years ago, our ancestors would never have tolerated it. Did you notice what we throw away?

Woman

I'll give some to my grandchildren, my grand-daughters, because we're a big family, because I have 5 children and 11 grandchildren. I’ll distribute among the family. Because the children, they like caribou. Because they eat fondue. They haven't eaten it in a long time. They're looking forward to it, and us too.

Winter landscape, cloudy sky: two small huts are set up on top of a rocky hill where only the peaks are covered with snow. They seem to be made of used wooden panels. The entrance to a cabin where the snow seems to have melted; it’s thick snow all around. A staircase of boards is placed on packed stones. The cabin is an assembly of pieces of wood and sheet metal; some are covered with faded pale paint. On the rocky and partially snow-covered shores of a frozen creek, a cabin rests on a pile of stones. It’s made of used wooden panels. Certain pieces, torn and hanging, come from an old canvas covering. In a hilly and rocky landscape, mainly covered with snow and ice, a wooden cabin appears to have been recently installed. It’s composed of natural coloured wooden panels not yet greyed by the sun. On the shores of a frozen creek bordered by a partially snow-covered rocky mountain, a wooden platform begins to appear due to the melting of the snow that covered it. This platform is divided into rectangular boxes. A wire frame rests on the platform in the foreground. A cabin, in a partially snow-covered rocky hill. It’s made of used wooden panels with faded blue paint. Some objects and building materials are placed around the cabin. A covered sled is attached to a snowmobile. It’s made of pieces of wooden panels and sheet metal, and represents a small enclosed cab on skis. There’s snow on the ground all around. Another snowmobile and a toboggan rest nearby. Two off-road vehicles are revealed by the melting snow. They're still half-buried. In the background, we can see a rocky hill partially covered with snow.

Report of an interview with elders from Pikogan. The elders speak Anishinabe, and a woman translates their words.

She says, “In the past, there was nothing. Everything is different now. We go into the woods, we have our Ski-Doo. Before, there weren’t any Ski-Doos. There’s a chainsaw to cut wood. In those days, there weren’t any chainsaws... Everything... changes. It's easier to go into the woods nowadays, but in the past, it wasn’t the same.” She says, “In the past, we had dogsleds, and that was our means of transportation.”

Everything used in the woods in the past, the tools they used... All the tools from the past were made of moose bones. The tools, such as those for tannery. The moose hide for our moccasins and the moose hide for our mittens.

She said, “In the fall, let's say, we would collect all our moose hide for tanning, to prepare for the sewing done in winter. Even for snowshoes, we used moose sinew, moose hide was used to make sinews, to make our snowshoes.” [...] To weave snowshoes... they didn’t use any tools to make snowshoes. They only used rawhide. For connections, that too, was sinew. And also, for toboggans. In Maniwaki, we call that a wild sled. For the sleds, they took sinew to connect, for the assembly, and to tie things to the sleds... All of this with sinew.

When we made blankets, we used hare skin. The coat... We can make coats with hare skin. We make strips, and curl them. They become somewhat like a cord and then it’s like knitting.

Hare skin has to be frozen, completely frozen, all winter long, outside. And that's when they start making strips and making kinds of cords for blankets. They start making coats. It also became ropes to connect mittens. That’s what she just said. […] There’re really warm. I personally had socks made of hare skin and mittens made of hare skin when I was young.

[…]

The technique of making items with hare skins is no longer practiced these days, we don't use these things anymore because we don't stay in the woods long enough nowadays... With Ski-Doos, it goes quite fast!

[…]

It could take between 200 and 300 hares to make a blanket, depending on the size of the blanket; perhaps 300 for a large blanket for two people. There were a lot of hares back then. I've never made one, but I saw my mother do it. She used a wooden frame to weave patches of hare skins.

[…]

She said, “Personally, when I raised my babies... My children, when they were born... I never used Pampers.” Swompe. We would gather swompe, moss. It was gathered in the fall so it could be frozen during winter. We had bags, nine bags weighing 75 pounds each, potatoes bag eh. We needed nine for the year. You had to remove all the little pieces of wood. We didn’t just take any kind of swompe. You really needed to know the right kind, because if you didn't have the right kind, the baby would become irritated and irritable. There’s so much to share.... She said, “There's so much knowledge.” We also made baby powder from rotten wood. There’s so much to share, so much knowledge, that we could talk about life in the woods for the whole week.

When I went into the woods, there was nothing, there weren’t any diapers. To wash the clothes, there was no washing machine. She said that in those days, there was nothing... Nothing that could bother me. When people lived in the woods, it wasn't that difficult. There were techniques... It was a way of life.

For more information on the different traditional techniques covered in this text, visit:
http://veritablesexperts.com

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