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Innu

The Innu / Ilnu ("man", "person") or Innut / Innuat / Ilnuatsh ("people"), formerly called Montagnais from the French colonial period (French for "mountain people", English pronunciation: /ˌmɔːntənˈj/), are the Indigenous inhabitants of territory in the northeastern portion of the present-day province of Labrador and some portions of Quebec. They refer to their traditional homeland as Nitassinan ("Our Land", ᓂᑕᔅᓯᓇᓐ) or Innu-assi ("Innu Land").

Innu
Innu traders outside the Hudson's Bay Company trading post in Davis Inlet, Newfoundland and Labrador, 1903
Total population
27,755[1] (2016 census)
Regions with significant populations
Canada
Languages
Innu, Naskapi, English, French
Religion
Christianity, other
Related ethnic groups
Cree, Algonquin people, Naskapi, Atikamekw
Innu, Ilnu / assi
"person" / "land"
PersonInnu / Ilnu
PeopleInnut / Innuat / Ilnuatsh
LanguageInnu-aimun
CountryNitassinan

The Innu are divided into several bands, with the Montagnais being the southernmost group and the Naskapi being the northernmost.

Their ancestors were known to have lived on these lands as hunter-gatherers for several thousand years. To support their seasonal hunting migrations, they created portable tents made of animal skins. Their subsistence activities were historically centred on hunting and trapping caribou, moose, deer, and small game.

Their language, Ilnu-Aimun or Innu-Aimun (popularly known since the French colonial era as Montagnais),[2] is spoken throughout Nitassinan, with certain dialect differences. It is part of the Cree language group, and is unrelated to the Inuit languages of other nearby peoples.

The "Innu / Ilnu" consist of two regional tribal groups, which differ in dialect and partly also in their way of life and culture:

  • the Ilnu, Nehilaw or "Western/Southern Montagnais" in the south, speak the "l"-dialect (Ilnu-Aimun or Nenueun/Neːhlweːuːn), and
  • the Innu or "Eastern Montagnais" ("Central/Moisie Montagnais", "Eastern/Lower North Shore Montagnais", and "Labrador/North West River Montagnais") live further north; they speak the "n"-dialect (Innu-Aimun)

Both groups are still called "Montagnais" in the official language of Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Development Canada. The Naskapi ("people beyond the horizon", ᓇᔅᑲᐱ), who live further north, also identify as Innu or Iyiyiw.

Today, about 18,000 Innu live in eleven settlements within reserves in Quebec and Labrador. To avoid confusion with the Inuit, who belong to the Eskimo peoples, today only the singular form "Innu / Ilnu" is used for the Innu, members of the large Cree-language family. The plural form of "Innut / Innuat / Ilnuatsh" has been abandoned.

Montagnais, Naskapi or Innu edit

 
Lands traditionally inhabited by the Innu. Naskapi land is shown in yellow and Montagnais land in red

The people are frequently classified by the geography of their primary locations:

  • the Neenoilno, live along the north shore of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, in Quebec; they have historically been referred to by Europeans as Montagnais (French for "mountain people", English pronunciation: /ˌmɔːntənˈj/),[3] or Innu proper (Nehilaw and Ilniw – "people")
  • The Naskapi (also known as Innu and Iyiyiw), live farther north and are less numerous. The Innu recognize several distinctions among their people (e.g. Mushuau Innuat, Maskuanu, Uashau Innuat) based on different regional affiliations and speakers of various dialects of the Innu language.
     
    Innu communities of Quebec and Labrador and the two Naskapi communities (Kawawachikamach and Natuashish)

The word Naskapi was first recorded by French colonists in the 17th century. They applied it to distant Innu groups who were beyond the reach of Catholic missionary influence. It was particularly applied to those people living in the lands that bordered Ungava Bay and the northern Labrador coast, near the Inuit communities of northern Quebec and northern Labrador. Gradually it came to refer to the people known today as the Naskapi First Nation.

The Naskapi are traditionally nomadic peoples, in contrast with the more sedentary Montagnais, who establish settled territories.

The Mushuau Innuat (plural), while related to the Naskapi, split off from the tribe in the 1900s. They were subject to a government relocation program at Davis Inlet. Some of the families of the Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach have close relatives in the Cree village of Whapmagoostui, on the eastern shore of Hudson Bay.

Since 1990, the Montagnais people have generally chosen to be officially referred to as the Innu, which means human being in Innu-aimun. The Naskapi have continued to use the word Naskapi.

Innu communities edit

Labrador Communities edit

Natuashish edit

('Nat-wah-sheesh', formerly Davis Inlet (Utshimassits), home of the Mushuau Innu First Nation, Reserve: Natuashish #2, c. 43 km2, Population: 1,089) (Naskapi reserve)

Sheshatshiu edit

('Shesh-ah-shee', Tshishe-shatshu in standardized orthography, home of the Sheshatshiu Innu First Nation, Reserve: Sheshatshiu #3, ca. 8 km2, Population: 1,824)

Although Sheshatshiu and Natuashish are home to most of the province's Innu people, some also live at Labrador City, Wabush, Happy Valley-Goose Bay, St. John's, and elsewhere.[4]

Quebec Communities edit

Mamit Innuat edit

More of 3,300 members

1 Innus of Ekuanitshit || Ekuanitshit || 682[5]

2 Montagnais de Natashquan || Natashquan ||1179[6]

3 Montagnais de Pakua Shipi ||Pakuashipi (Saint-Augustin) || 394[7]

Reserve community: St. Augustin Indian Settlement, Population: 398

4 Montagnais de Unamen Shipu || La Romaine ||1225[5]

Reserve: Romaine #2, c. 40 ha, Population: 1,232

Conseil tribal Mamuitun edit

Around 17,000 members

1 Bande des Innus de Pessamit || Pessamit || 3,962[8]

  • Betsiamites (Pessamu in standardized orthography, home of the Bande des Innus de Pessamit, known also as 'Pessamit Innu Band', Reserve: Betsiamites, ca. 252 km2, Population: 4,041)and the capital of the Innus

2 Innu Takuaikan Uashat Mak Mani-Utenam || Sept-Îles || 4,687[9]

Reserves: Maliotenam #27A, c. 16 km east of Sept-Îles, Uashat #27 in the City of Sept-Îles, c. 6 km2, Population: 4,813

3 Innue Essipit || Essipit || 790[10]

  • Essipit (Essipu in standardized orthography, home of the Innue Essipit, also known as Essipit First Nation or 'Montagnais Essipit', Reserve: Innue Essipit (or 'Communaute Montagnaise Essipit'), c. 88 ha, Population: 886)

4 La Nation Innu Matimekush-Lac John || Schefferville || 1014[11]

5 Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation || Mashteuiatsh || 6,761[12]

  • Mashteuiatsh (Matshiteuiau in standardized orthography, home of the Montagnais du Lac St.-Jean, also known as 'Première nation des Pekuakamiulnuatsh', autonym: 'Ilnuatsh du Pekuakami', Reserve: Mashteuiatsh, c. 15 km2, Population: 7,274)

Kawawachikamach edit

(Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach), Reserve: Kawawachikamach, c. 49 km2, Population 2020: 639

History edit

 
Reindeer hunting in Labrador

The Norsemen referred to the Innu as the Skræling in Greenlandic Norse. They referred to Nitassinan as Markland.

The Innu were historically allied with neighbouring Atikamekw, Maliseet and Algonquin peoples against their enemies, the Algonquian-speaking Mi'kmaq and Iroquoian-speaking Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy (known as Haudenosaunee. During the Beaver Wars (1609-1701), the Iroquois repeatedly invaded the Innu territories from their homelands south of the Great Lakes. They took women and young males as captive slaves, and plundered their hunting grounds in search of more furs. Since these raids were made by the Iroquois with unprecedented brutality, the Innu themselves adopted the torment, torture, and cruelty of their enemies.

The Naskapi, on the other hand, usually had to confront the southward advancing Inuit in the east of the peninsula.[citation needed]

 
Roman Catholic procession of First Nations people in the Labrador peninsula

Innu oral tradition describes the original encounters of the Innu and the French explorers led by Samuel de Champlain as fraught with distrust. Neither group understood the language of the other, and the Innu were concerned about the motives of the French explorers.[13]

The French asked permission to settle on the Innu's coastal land, which the Innu called Uepishtikueiau. This eventually developed as Quebec City. According to oral tradition, the Innu at first declined their request. The French demonstrated their ability to farm wheat on the land and promised they would share their bounty with the Innu in the future, which the Innu accepted.[14]

Two distinct versions of the oral history describe the outcome. In the first, the French used gifts of farmed food and manufactured goods to encourage the Innu to become dependent on them. Then, the French changed it to a mercantile relationship: trading these items to the Innu in exchange for furs. When the nomadic Innu went inland for the winter, the French increased the size and population of their settlement considerably, eventually completely displacing the Innu.[15]

The second, and more widespread, version of the oral history describes a more immediate conflict. In this version, the Innu taught the French how to survive in their traditional lands. Once the French had learned enough to survive on their own, they began to resent the Innu. The French began to attack the Innu, who retaliated in an attempt to reclaim their ancestral territory. The Innu had a disadvantage in numbers and weaponry, and eventually began to avoid the area rather than risk further defeat. During this conflict, the French colonists took many Innu women as wives. French women did not immigrate to New France in the early period.[16]

French explorer Samuel de Champlain eventually became involved in the Innu's conflict with the Iroquois, who were ranging north from their traditional territory around the Great Lakes in present-day New York and Pennsylvania. On July 29, 1609, at Ticonderoga or Crown Point, New York, (historians are not sure which of these two places), Champlain and his party encountered a group of Iroquois, likely Mohawk, who were the easternmost tribe of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy. A battle began the next day. As two hundred Iroquois advanced on Champlain's position, a native guide pointed out the three enemy chiefs to the French. According to legend, Champlain fired his arquebus and killed two of the Mohawk chiefs with one shot; one of his men shot and killed the third. The Mohawk reportedly fled the scene. Although the French also traded extensively with the Mohawk and other Iroquois, and converted some to Catholicism, they also continued to have armed conflicts with them.

Present status edit

The Innu of Labrador and those living on the north shore of the Gulf of Saint-Lawrence in the Canadian Shield region have never officially ceded their territory to Canada by way of treaty or other agreement. But, as European-Canadians began widespread forest and mining operations at the turn of the 20th century, the Innu became increasingly settled in coastal communities and in the interior of Quebec. The Canadian and provincial governments, the Catholic, Moravian, and Anglican churches, all encouraged the Innu to settle in more permanent, majority-style communities, in the belief that their lives would improve with this adaptation. This coercive assimilation resulted in the Innue giving up some traditional activities (hunting, trapping, fishing). Because of these social disruptions and the systemic disadvantages faced by Indigenous peoples, community life in the permanent settlements often became associated with high levels of substance abuse, domestic violence, and suicide among the Innu.

Labrador Innu organizations and land claims edit

In 1999, Survival International published a study of the Innu communities of Labrador. It assessed the adverse effects of the Canadian government's relocating the people far from their ancestral lands and preventing them from practising their ancient way of life.[17]

The Innu people of Labrador formally organized the Naskapi Montagnais Innu Association in 1976 to protect their rights, lands, and way of life against industrialization and other outside forces. The organization changed its name to the Innu Nation in 1990 and functions today as the governing body of the Labrador Innu. The group has won recognition for its members as status Indians under Canada's Indian Act in 2002 and is currently involved in land claim and self-governance negotiations with the federal and provincial governments.[4]

In addition to the Innu Nation, residents at both Natuashish and Sheshatshiu elect Band Councils to represent community concerns. The chiefs of both councils sit on the Innu Nation's board of directors and the three groups work in cooperation with one another.

The Innu Nation's efforts to raise awareness about the environmental impacts of a mining project in Voisey's Bay were documented in Marjorie Beaucage's 1997 film Ntapueu ... i am telling the truth.[18]: 342 

Davis Inlet, Labrador edit

In 1999, Survival International published a study of the Innu communities of Labrador. It assessed the adverse effects of the Canadian government's relocating the people far from their ancestral lands and preventing them from practising their ancient way of life.[17] Survival International concluded that these policies violated contemporary international law in human rights, and drew parallels with the treatment of Tibetans by the People's Republic of China. According to the study, from 1990 to 1997, the Innu community of Davis Inlet had a suicide rate more than twelve times the Canadian average, and well over three times the rate often observed in isolated northern villages.[17]

By 2000, the Innu island community of Davis Inlet asked the Canadian government to assist with a local addiction public health crisis. At their request, the community was relocated to a nearby mainland site, now known as Natuashish. At the same time, the Canadian government created the Natuashish and Sheshatshiu band councils under the Indian Act.

Kawawachikamach, Quebec edit

The Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach, of Quebec, signed a comprehensive land claims settlement, the Northeastern Quebec Agreement; they did so in 1978. As a consequence, the Naskapi of Kawawachikamach are no longer subject to certain provisions of the Indian Act. All the Innu communities of Quebec are still subject to the Act.

New York Power Authority controversy edit

The New York Power Authority's proposed contract in 2009 with the province of Quebec to buy power from its extensive hydroelectric dam facilities has generated controversy, because it was dependent on construction of a new dam complex and transmission lines that would have interfered with the traditional ways of the Innu.[19] According to the Sierra Club:

[t]he "New York Power Authority is in preliminary discussions and considering the liability of a new contract with Hydro Quebec," a Canadian supplier of hydroelectricity.

— Legislative Gazette[19]

The Innu community, the Sierra Club, and the National Lawyers Guild are fighting to prevent this proposed contract, which would have to be approved by New York's Governor, under his regulatory authority.[19] The problem is that construction of required electric transmission lines would hinder the Innu's hunting-gathering-fishing lifestyle:

Chief Georges-Ernest Grégoire of the Innu community in Eastern Quebec urged the governor not to proceed with a plan to buy hydroelectric power from Canada, saying the dam complex that would be built would affect the traditional way of life for his people.

— Legislative Gazette (caption for a photo of Chief Grégoire)[19]

Chief Grégoire's comments at a press conference in Albany, New York were translated, but whether from French or Innu-aimun is not clear.[19]

Natuashish and Sheshatshiu, Newfoundland and Labrador edit

Although Innu have only been in Sheshatshiu since fur trading posts were established by the Hudson's Bay Company in Northwest River in the mid-1700s and only in Davis Inlet/Natuashish since the Moravians set up along the Inuit Coast in 1771, Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams struck a deal on September 26, 2008 with Labrador's Innu to permit construction of a hydroelectric megaproject to proceed on the proposed Lower Churchill site. They also negotiated compensation for another project on the Upper Churchill, where large tracts of traditional Innu hunting lands were flooded.

Culture edit

 
"Buckle up your children" sign in Innu-aimun language, in the Pointe-Parent reserve near Natasquan, Quebec.
 
Housing

Ethnobotany edit

The Innu people grate the inner bark of Abies balsamea and eat it to benefit the diet.[20]

Traditional crafts edit

Traditional Innu craft is demonstrated in the Innu tea doll. These children's toys originally served a dual purpose for nomadic Innu tribes. When travelling vast distances over challenging terrain, the people left nothing behind. They believed that "Crow" would take it away. Everyone, including young children, helped to transport essential goods. Innu women made intricate dolls from caribou hides and scraps of cloth. They filled the dolls with tea and gave them to young girls to carry on long journeys. The girls could play with the dolls while also carrying important goods. Every able-bodied person carried something. Men generally carried the heavier bags and women would carry young children.

Traditional clothing, style and accessories edit

Men wore caribou pants and boots with a buckskin long shirt, all made by women. With the introduction of trade cloth from the French and English, people began replacing the buckskin shirts with ones made of cloth. Most still wore boots and pants made from caribou hide. Women wore long dresses of buckskin. Contemporary Innu women have often replaced these with manufactured pants and jackets. Women traditionally wore their hair long or in two coils. Men wore theirs long.

Both genders wore necklaces made of bone and bead. Smoke pipes were used by both genders, marked for women as shorter. If a man killed a bear, it was a sign of joy and initiation into adulthood and the man would wear a necklace made from the bear's claws.

Housing edit

The houses of the Montagnais were cone shaped. The Naskapi made long, domed houses covered in caribou hides. These days the hearth is a metal stove in the centre of the house.

Traditional foods edit

Animals traditionally eaten included moose, caribou, porcupine, rabbits, marten, woodchuck, squirrel; Canada geese, snow geese, brants, ducks, teal, loons, spruce grouse, woodcock, snipe, passenger pigeons, ptarmigan; whitefish, lake trout, salmon, Arctic char, seal (naskapi) pike, walleye, suckerfish (Catostomidae), sturgeon, catfish, lamprey, and smelt. Fish were eaten roasted or smoke-dried. Moose meat and several types of fish were also smoked. Bannock made from oats, introduced by the French in the 16th century, became a staple. Meat was eaten frozen, raw or roasted, and caribou was sometimes boiled in a stew. Pemmican was made with moose or caribou.

Plants traditionally eaten included raspberries, blueberries, strawberries, cherries, wild grapes, hazelnuts, crab apples, red martagon bulbs, Indian potato, and maple-tree sap for sweetening. Cornmeal was traded with Iroquois, Algonquin, and Abenaki First Nations peoples, and made into apon (cornbread), which sometimes also included oat or wheat flour when it became available. Pine-needle tea kept away infections and colds resulting from the harsh weather.

Buckskin edit

Traditionally, buckskin was a most important material used for clothing, boots, moccasins, house covers and storage. Women prepared the hides and many of the products made from it. They scraped the hides to remove all fur, then left them outside to freeze. The next step was to stretch the hide on a frame. They rubbed it with a mixture of animal brain and pine needle tea to soften it. The dampened hide was formed into a ball and left overnight. In the morning, it would be stretched again, then placed over a smoker to smoke and tan it. The hide was left overnight. The finished hide was called buckskin.

Mythology edit

The oral traditions of the Innu are noted as similar to those of other Cree-speaking cultures.[21] Of particular relevance is Tshakapesh, a lunar folk hero.[22]

The spirits they believed in are Caribou Master and Matshishkapeu.

Transportation edit

 
Canoes

In traditional Innu communities, people walked or used snow shoes. While people still walk and use snow shoes where necessary for hunting or trapping, many Innu communities rely heavily on trucks, SUVs, and cars; in Northern Innu communities, people use snowmobiles for hunting and general transportation.

Notable people edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Aboriginal Ancestry Responses (73), Single and Multiple Aboriginal Responses (4), Residence on or off reserve (3), Residence inside or outside Inuit Nunangat (7), Age (8A) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces and Territories, 2016 Census - 25% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Government of Canada. 2017-10-25. Retrieved 2017-11-23.
  2. ^ Innu-Aimun - the language of the Innu (Montagnais) 2011-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Rogers & Leacock (1981:169)
  4. ^ a b Innu Rights and Government in Labrador
  5. ^ a b Branch, Government of Canada; Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada; Communications (March 2020). "Population inscrite - Les Innus de Ekuanitshit". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2020-04-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Branch, Government of Canada; Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada; Communications (March 2020). "Population inscrite - Première Nation des Innus de Nutashkuan". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2020-04-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Branch, Government of Canada; Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada; Communications (2008-11-03). "Population inscrite - Montagnais de Pakua Shipi". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2020-04-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ "Population inscrite (Bande des Innus de Pessamit)". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  9. ^ "Population inscrite (Innu Takuaikan Uashat Mak Mani-Utenam)". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  10. ^ "Population inscrite (Innue Essipit)". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  11. ^ "Population inscrite (La Nation Innu Matimekush-Lac John)". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  12. ^ "Population inscrite (Montagnais du Lac St-Jean)". Crown–Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  13. ^ Vincent, Sylvie (2006). "The Uepishtikueiau Narrative: The Arrival of the French at the site of Québec City according to Innu Oral Tradition". In Christie, Gordon (ed.). Aboriginality and Governance: A Multidisciplinary Approach. Penticton Indian Reserve, British Columbia: Theytus Books. pp. 7–9. ISBN 1894778243.
  14. ^ Vincent 2006, p. 10.
  15. ^ Vincent 2006, p. 12–15.
  16. ^ Vincent 2006, p. 15–17.
  17. ^ a b c Canada's Tibet: The Killing of the Innu, a report from Survival International (PDF file)
  18. ^ Bell, Lynne; Williamson, Janice (2002). "In the Hands of the People: A Conversation with Marjorie Beaucage". In Beard, William; White, Jerry (eds.). North of Everything: English-Canadian Cinema Since 1980. University of Alberta. ISBN 9780888643902.
  19. ^ a b c d e Katrina Kieltyka, "Sierra Club fighting plan to buy Canadian power: Say hydroelectric dams would harm indigenous people," Legislative Gazette, March 16, 2009, p. 21, available at Legislative Gazette archives 2009-03-25 at the Wayback Machine (.pdf file). Retrieved March 20, 2009.
  20. ^ Speck, Frank G., 1917, Medicine Practices of the Northeastern Algonquians, Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Americanists Pp. 303-321, page 313
  21. ^ "Naskapi and Montagnais Innu Legends (Folklore, Myths, and Traditional Indian Stories)".
  22. ^ "Tshakapesh (Chakabesh), dwarf hero of the Innu and Cree".
  23. ^ "Meet Canada's first Innu MP, the Bloc's Bernard Cleary". The Hill Times, November 8, 2004.
  24. ^ Sylvain Turcotte, "Sharon Fontaine-Ishpatao se plaît à jouer". Le Nord-Côtier, August 2, 2022.
  25. ^ a b . Encyclopedia of Music in Canada > Pop Groups. Historica-Dominion. 2009. Archived from the original on May 18, 2005. Retrieved 2009-10-03.
  26. ^ "Penashue appointed to federal cabinet". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2011-05-18. Retrieved 2011-05-18.

General bibliography edit

  • Rogers, Edward S., and Leacock, Eleanor (1981). "Montagnais-Naskapi". In J. Helm (Ed.), Handbook of North American Indians: Subarctic (Vol. 6, pp. 169–189). Washington: Smithsonian Institution.

External links edit

  • Official website of the Innu Nation of Labrador.
  • Official website of the Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach, Quebec
  • Article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition on the difference between Naskapi and Montagnais
  • Website of the Tshikapisk Foundation (a non profit Innu organization focussing on social and cultural renewal)
  • Virtual Museum of Canada - Tipatshimuna: Innu stories from the land
  • Montagnais Indians (Quebec) - Article in the Catholic Encyclopedia
  • CBC Digital Archives - Davis Inlet: Innu community in crisis
  • Montagnais History

innu, language, language, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, inuit, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find,. For the language see Innu language For other uses see Innu disambiguation Not to be confused with the Inuit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Innu news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Innu Ilnu man person or Innut Innuat Ilnuatsh people formerly called Montagnais from the French colonial period French for mountain people English pronunciation ˌ m ɔː n t e n ˈ j eɪ are the Indigenous inhabitants of territory in the northeastern portion of the present day province of Labrador and some portions of Quebec They refer to their traditional homeland as Nitassinan Our Land ᓂᑕᔅᓯᓇᓐ or Innu assi Innu Land InnuInnu traders outside the Hudson s Bay Company trading post in Davis Inlet Newfoundland and Labrador 1903Total population27 755 1 2016 census Regions with significant populationsCanadaLanguagesInnu Naskapi English FrenchReligionChristianity otherRelated ethnic groupsCree Algonquin people Naskapi AtikamekwInnu Ilnu assi person land PersonInnu IlnuPeopleInnut Innuat IlnuatshLanguageInnu aimunCountryNitassinanThe Innu are divided into several bands with the Montagnais being the southernmost group and the Naskapi being the northernmost Their ancestors were known to have lived on these lands as hunter gatherers for several thousand years To support their seasonal hunting migrations they created portable tents made of animal skins Their subsistence activities were historically centred on hunting and trapping caribou moose deer and small game Their language Ilnu Aimun or Innu Aimun popularly known since the French colonial era as Montagnais 2 is spoken throughout Nitassinan with certain dialect differences It is part of the Cree language group and is unrelated to the Inuit languages of other nearby peoples The Innu Ilnu consist of two regional tribal groups which differ in dialect and partly also in their way of life and culture the Ilnu Nehilaw or Western Southern Montagnais in the south speak the l dialect Ilnu Aimun or Nenueun Neːhlweːuːn and the Innu or Eastern Montagnais Central Moisie Montagnais Eastern Lower North Shore Montagnais and Labrador North West River Montagnais live further north they speak the n dialect Innu Aimun Both groups are still called Montagnais in the official language of Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Development Canada The Naskapi people beyond the horizon ᓇᔅᑲᐱ who live further north also identify as Innu or Iyiyiw Today about 18 000 Innu live in eleven settlements within reserves in Quebec and Labrador To avoid confusion with the Inuit who belong to the Eskimo peoples today only the singular form Innu Ilnu is used for the Innu members of the large Cree language family The plural form of Innut Innuat Ilnuatsh has been abandoned Contents 1 Montagnais Naskapi or Innu 2 Innu communities 2 1 Labrador Communities 2 1 1 Natuashish 2 1 2 Sheshatshiu 2 2 Quebec Communities 2 2 1 Mamit Innuat 2 2 2 Conseil tribal Mamuitun 2 2 3 Kawawachikamach 3 History 4 Present status 4 1 Labrador Innu organizations and land claims 4 2 Davis Inlet Labrador 4 3 Kawawachikamach Quebec 4 4 New York Power Authority controversy 4 5 Natuashish and Sheshatshiu Newfoundland and Labrador 5 Culture 5 1 Ethnobotany 5 2 Traditional crafts 5 3 Traditional clothing style and accessories 5 4 Housing 5 5 Traditional foods 5 6 Buckskin 5 7 Mythology 6 Transportation 7 Notable people 8 Citations 9 General bibliography 10 External linksMontagnais Naskapi or Innu editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Lands traditionally inhabited by the Innu Naskapi land is shown in yellow and Montagnais land in redThe people are frequently classified by the geography of their primary locations the Neenoilno live along the north shore of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in Quebec they have historically been referred to by Europeans as Montagnais French for mountain people English pronunciation ˌ m ɔː n t e n ˈ j eɪ 3 or Innu proper Nehilaw and Ilniw people The Naskapi also known as Innu and Iyiyiw live farther north and are less numerous The Innu recognize several distinctions among their people e g Mushuau Innuat Maskuanu Uashau Innuat based on different regional affiliations and speakers of various dialects of the Innu language nbsp Innu communities of Quebec and Labrador and the two Naskapi communities Kawawachikamach and Natuashish The word Naskapi was first recorded by French colonists in the 17th century They applied it to distant Innu groups who were beyond the reach of Catholic missionary influence It was particularly applied to those people living in the lands that bordered Ungava Bay and the northern Labrador coast near the Inuit communities of northern Quebec and northern Labrador Gradually it came to refer to the people known today as the Naskapi First Nation The Naskapi are traditionally nomadic peoples in contrast with the more sedentary Montagnais who establish settled territories The Mushuau Innuat plural while related to the Naskapi split off from the tribe in the 1900s They were subject to a government relocation program at Davis Inlet Some of the families of the Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach have close relatives in the Cree village of Whapmagoostui on the eastern shore of Hudson Bay Since 1990 the Montagnais people have generally chosen to be officially referred to as the Innu which means human being in Innu aimun The Naskapi have continued to use the word Naskapi Innu communities editLabrador Communities edit Natuashish edit Nat wah sheesh formerly Davis Inlet Utshimassits home of the Mushuau Innu First Nation Reserve Natuashish 2 c 43 km2 Population 1 089 Naskapi reserve Sheshatshiu edit Shesh ah shee Tshishe shatshu in standardized orthography home of the Sheshatshiu Innu First Nation Reserve Sheshatshiu 3 ca 8 km2 Population 1 824 Although Sheshatshiu and Natuashish are home to most of the province s Innu people some also live at Labrador City Wabush Happy Valley Goose Bay St John s and elsewhere 4 Quebec Communities edit Mamit Innuat edit More of 3 300 members1 Innus of Ekuanitshit Ekuanitshit 682 5 Ekuantshit Mingan Ekuanitshu in standardized orthography home of Les Innus de Ekuanitshit Reserve Mingan c 19 km2 Population 685 2 Montagnais de Natashquan Natashquan 1179 6 Natashquan Nutashkuan in standardized orthography home of the Montagnais de Natashquan Reserve Natashquan 1 c 20 ha Population 1 214 3 Montagnais de Pakua Shipi Pakuashipi Saint Augustin 394 7 Pakua shipu Montagnais de Pakua Shipi Reserve community St Augustin Indian Settlement Population 3984 Montagnais de Unamen Shipu La Romaine 1225 5 Unaman shipu Montagnais de Unamen Shipu Reserve Romaine 2 c 40 ha Population 1 232 Conseil tribal Mamuitun edit Around 17 000 members1 Bande des Innus de Pessamit Pessamit 3 962 8 Betsiamites Pessamu in standardized orthography home of the Bande des Innus de Pessamit known also as Pessamit Innu Band Reserve Betsiamites ca 252 km2 Population 4 041 and the capital of the Innus2 Innu Takuaikan Uashat Mak Mani Utenam Sept Iles 4 687 9 Uashat Maliotenam Innu Takuaikan Uashat Mak Mani Utenam Reserves Maliotenam 27A c 16 km east of Sept Iles Uashat 27 in the City of Sept Iles c 6 km2 Population 4 8133 Innue Essipit Essipit 790 10 Essipit Essipu in standardized orthography home of the Innue Essipit also known as Essipit First Nation or Montagnais Essipit Reserve Innue Essipit or Communaute Montagnaise Essipit c 88 ha Population 886 4 La Nation Innu Matimekush Lac John Schefferville 1014 11 La Nation Innu Matimekush Lac John also known as Innu Nation of Matimekush Lac John Reserve Lac John Matimekosh 3 c 94 ha Population 1 040 Lac John Matimekosh Matamekush in standardized orthography 5 Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation Mashteuiatsh 6 761 12 Mashteuiatsh Matshiteuiau in standardized orthography home of the Montagnais du Lac St Jean also known as Premiere nation des Pekuakamiulnuatsh autonym Ilnuatsh du Pekuakami Reserve Mashteuiatsh c 15 km2 Population 7 274 Kawawachikamach edit Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach Reserve Kawawachikamach c 49 km2 Population 2020 639History editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Reindeer hunting in LabradorThe Norsemen referred to the Innu as the Skraeling in Greenlandic Norse They referred to Nitassinan as Markland The Innu were historically allied with neighbouring Atikamekw Maliseet and Algonquin peoples against their enemies the Algonquian speaking Mi kmaq and Iroquoian speaking Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy known as Haudenosaunee During the Beaver Wars 1609 1701 the Iroquois repeatedly invaded the Innu territories from their homelands south of the Great Lakes They took women and young males as captive slaves and plundered their hunting grounds in search of more furs Since these raids were made by the Iroquois with unprecedented brutality the Innu themselves adopted the torment torture and cruelty of their enemies The Naskapi on the other hand usually had to confront the southward advancing Inuit in the east of the peninsula citation needed nbsp Roman Catholic procession of First Nations people in the Labrador peninsulaInnu oral tradition describes the original encounters of the Innu and the French explorers led by Samuel de Champlain as fraught with distrust Neither group understood the language of the other and the Innu were concerned about the motives of the French explorers 13 The French asked permission to settle on the Innu s coastal land which the Innu called Uepishtikueiau This eventually developed as Quebec City According to oral tradition the Innu at first declined their request The French demonstrated their ability to farm wheat on the land and promised they would share their bounty with the Innu in the future which the Innu accepted 14 Two distinct versions of the oral history describe the outcome In the first the French used gifts of farmed food and manufactured goods to encourage the Innu to become dependent on them Then the French changed it to a mercantile relationship trading these items to the Innu in exchange for furs When the nomadic Innu went inland for the winter the French increased the size and population of their settlement considerably eventually completely displacing the Innu 15 The second and more widespread version of the oral history describes a more immediate conflict In this version the Innu taught the French how to survive in their traditional lands Once the French had learned enough to survive on their own they began to resent the Innu The French began to attack the Innu who retaliated in an attempt to reclaim their ancestral territory The Innu had a disadvantage in numbers and weaponry and eventually began to avoid the area rather than risk further defeat During this conflict the French colonists took many Innu women as wives French women did not immigrate to New France in the early period 16 French explorer Samuel de Champlain eventually became involved in the Innu s conflict with the Iroquois who were ranging north from their traditional territory around the Great Lakes in present day New York and Pennsylvania On July 29 1609 at Ticonderoga or Crown Point New York historians are not sure which of these two places Champlain and his party encountered a group of Iroquois likely Mohawk who were the easternmost tribe of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy A battle began the next day As two hundred Iroquois advanced on Champlain s position a native guide pointed out the three enemy chiefs to the French According to legend Champlain fired his arquebus and killed two of the Mohawk chiefs with one shot one of his men shot and killed the third The Mohawk reportedly fled the scene Although the French also traded extensively with the Mohawk and other Iroquois and converted some to Catholicism they also continued to have armed conflicts with them Present status editThe Innu of Labrador and those living on the north shore of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in the Canadian Shield region have never officially ceded their territory to Canada by way of treaty or other agreement But as European Canadians began widespread forest and mining operations at the turn of the 20th century the Innu became increasingly settled in coastal communities and in the interior of Quebec The Canadian and provincial governments the Catholic Moravian and Anglican churches all encouraged the Innu to settle in more permanent majority style communities in the belief that their lives would improve with this adaptation This coercive assimilation resulted in the Innue giving up some traditional activities hunting trapping fishing Because of these social disruptions and the systemic disadvantages faced by Indigenous peoples community life in the permanent settlements often became associated with high levels of substance abuse domestic violence and suicide among the Innu Labrador Innu organizations and land claims edit In 1999 Survival International published a study of the Innu communities of Labrador It assessed the adverse effects of the Canadian government s relocating the people far from their ancestral lands and preventing them from practising their ancient way of life 17 The Innu people of Labrador formally organized the Naskapi Montagnais Innu Association in 1976 to protect their rights lands and way of life against industrialization and other outside forces The organization changed its name to the Innu Nation in 1990 and functions today as the governing body of the Labrador Innu The group has won recognition for its members as status Indians under Canada s Indian Act in 2002 and is currently involved in land claim and self governance negotiations with the federal and provincial governments 4 In addition to the Innu Nation residents at both Natuashish and Sheshatshiu elect Band Councils to represent community concerns The chiefs of both councils sit on the Innu Nation s board of directors and the three groups work in cooperation with one another The Innu Nation s efforts to raise awareness about the environmental impacts of a mining project in Voisey s Bay were documented in Marjorie Beaucage s 1997 film Ntapueu i am telling the truth 18 342 Davis Inlet Labrador edit In 1999 Survival International published a study of the Innu communities of Labrador It assessed the adverse effects of the Canadian government s relocating the people far from their ancestral lands and preventing them from practising their ancient way of life 17 Survival International concluded that these policies violated contemporary international law in human rights and drew parallels with the treatment of Tibetans by the People s Republic of China According to the study from 1990 to 1997 the Innu community of Davis Inlet had a suicide rate more than twelve times the Canadian average and well over three times the rate often observed in isolated northern villages 17 By 2000 the Innu island community of Davis Inlet asked the Canadian government to assist with a local addiction public health crisis At their request the community was relocated to a nearby mainland site now known as Natuashish At the same time the Canadian government created the Natuashish and Sheshatshiu band councils under the Indian Act Kawawachikamach Quebec edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach of Quebec signed a comprehensive land claims settlement the Northeastern Quebec Agreement they did so in 1978 As a consequence the Naskapi of Kawawachikamach are no longer subject to certain provisions of the Indian Act All the Innu communities of Quebec are still subject to the Act New York Power Authority controversy edit The New York Power Authority s proposed contract in 2009 with the province of Quebec to buy power from its extensive hydroelectric dam facilities has generated controversy because it was dependent on construction of a new dam complex and transmission lines that would have interfered with the traditional ways of the Innu 19 According to the Sierra Club t he New York Power Authority is in preliminary discussions and considering the liability of a new contract with Hydro Quebec a Canadian supplier of hydroelectricity Legislative Gazette 19 The Innu community the Sierra Club and the National Lawyers Guild are fighting to prevent this proposed contract which would have to be approved by New York s Governor under his regulatory authority 19 The problem is that construction of required electric transmission lines would hinder the Innu s hunting gathering fishing lifestyle Chief Georges Ernest Gregoire of the Innu community in Eastern Quebec urged the governor not to proceed with a plan to buy hydroelectric power from Canada saying the dam complex that would be built would affect the traditional way of life for his people Legislative Gazette caption for a photo of Chief Gregoire 19 Chief Gregoire s comments at a press conference in Albany New York were translated but whether from French or Innu aimun is not clear 19 Natuashish and Sheshatshiu Newfoundland and Labrador edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Although Innu have only been in Sheshatshiu since fur trading posts were established by the Hudson s Bay Company in Northwest River in the mid 1700s and only in Davis Inlet Natuashish since the Moravians set up along the Inuit Coast in 1771 Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams struck a deal on September 26 2008 with Labrador s Innu to permit construction of a hydroelectric megaproject to proceed on the proposed Lower Churchill site They also negotiated compensation for another project on the Upper Churchill where large tracts of traditional Innu hunting lands were flooded Culture editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Buckle up your children sign in Innu aimun language in the Pointe Parent reserve near Natasquan Quebec nbsp HousingEthnobotany edit The Innu people grate the inner bark of Abies balsamea and eat it to benefit the diet 20 Traditional crafts edit Traditional Innu craft is demonstrated in the Innu tea doll These children s toys originally served a dual purpose for nomadic Innu tribes When travelling vast distances over challenging terrain the people left nothing behind They believed that Crow would take it away Everyone including young children helped to transport essential goods Innu women made intricate dolls from caribou hides and scraps of cloth They filled the dolls with tea and gave them to young girls to carry on long journeys The girls could play with the dolls while also carrying important goods Every able bodied person carried something Men generally carried the heavier bags and women would carry young children Traditional clothing style and accessories edit Men wore caribou pants and boots with a buckskin long shirt all made by women With the introduction of trade cloth from the French and English people began replacing the buckskin shirts with ones made of cloth Most still wore boots and pants made from caribou hide Women wore long dresses of buckskin Contemporary Innu women have often replaced these with manufactured pants and jackets Women traditionally wore their hair long or in two coils Men wore theirs long Both genders wore necklaces made of bone and bead Smoke pipes were used by both genders marked for women as shorter If a man killed a bear it was a sign of joy and initiation into adulthood and the man would wear a necklace made from the bear s claws Housing edit The houses of the Montagnais were cone shaped The Naskapi made long domed houses covered in caribou hides These days the hearth is a metal stove in the centre of the house Traditional foods edit Animals traditionally eaten included moose caribou porcupine rabbits marten woodchuck squirrel Canada geese snow geese brants ducks teal loons spruce grouse woodcock snipe passenger pigeons ptarmigan whitefish lake trout salmon Arctic char seal naskapi pike walleye suckerfish Catostomidae sturgeon catfish lamprey and smelt Fish were eaten roasted or smoke dried Moose meat and several types of fish were also smoked Bannock made from oats introduced by the French in the 16th century became a staple Meat was eaten frozen raw or roasted and caribou was sometimes boiled in a stew Pemmican was made with moose or caribou Plants traditionally eaten included raspberries blueberries strawberries cherries wild grapes hazelnuts crab apples red martagon bulbs Indian potato and maple tree sap for sweetening Cornmeal was traded with Iroquois Algonquin and Abenaki First Nations peoples and made into apon cornbread which sometimes also included oat or wheat flour when it became available Pine needle tea kept away infections and colds resulting from the harsh weather Buckskin edit Traditionally buckskin was a most important material used for clothing boots moccasins house covers and storage Women prepared the hides and many of the products made from it They scraped the hides to remove all fur then left them outside to freeze The next step was to stretch the hide on a frame They rubbed it with a mixture of animal brain and pine needle tea to soften it The dampened hide was formed into a ball and left overnight In the morning it would be stretched again then placed over a smoker to smoke and tan it The hide was left overnight The finished hide was called buckskin Mythology edit The oral traditions of the Innu are noted as similar to those of other Cree speaking cultures 21 Of particular relevance is Tshakapesh a lunar folk hero 22 The spirits they believed in are Caribou Master and Matshishkapeu Transportation edit nbsp CanoesIn traditional Innu communities people walked or used snow shoes While people still walk and use snow shoes where necessary for hunting or trapping many Innu communities rely heavily on trucks SUVs and cars in Northern Innu communities people use snowmobiles for hunting and general transportation Notable people editAn Antane Kapesh writer Josephine Bacon poet Jani Bellefleur Kaltush filmmaker Bernard Cleary politician 23 Naomi Fontaine writer Sharon Fontaine Ishpatao actress 24 Jonathan Genest Jourdain politician Michel Jean journalist and writer Jean Luc Kanape conservationist and actor Natasha Kanape Fontaine writer Kanen musician Carole Labarre writer Matiu musician Claude McKenzie musician Kashtin 25 Genevieve McKenzie Sioui musician Rita Mestokosho poet Peter Penashue politician 26 Scott Pien Picard musician Laurie Rousseau Nepton astrophysicist Shauit musician Florent Vollant musician Kashtin 25 Citations edit Aboriginal Ancestry Responses 73 Single and Multiple Aboriginal Responses 4 Residence on or off reserve 3 Residence inside or outside Inuit Nunangat 7 Age 8A and Sex 3 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces and Territories 2016 Census 25 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Government of Canada 2017 10 25 Retrieved 2017 11 23 Innu Aimun the language of the Innu Montagnais Archived 2011 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Rogers amp Leacock 1981 169 a b Innu Rights and Government in Labrador a b Branch Government of Canada Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada Communications March 2020 Population inscrite Les Innus de Ekuanitshit Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2020 04 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Branch Government of Canada Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada Communications March 2020 Population inscrite Premiere Nation des Innus de Nutashkuan Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2020 04 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Branch Government of Canada Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada Communications 2008 11 03 Population inscrite Montagnais de Pakua Shipi Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2020 04 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Population inscrite Bande des Innus de Pessamit Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2021 04 24 Population inscrite Innu Takuaikan Uashat Mak Mani Utenam Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2021 04 24 Population inscrite Innue Essipit Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2021 04 24 Population inscrite La Nation Innu Matimekush Lac John Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2021 04 24 Population inscrite Montagnais du Lac St Jean Crown Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada Government of Canada Retrieved 2021 04 24 Vincent Sylvie 2006 The Uepishtikueiau Narrative The Arrival of the French at the site of Quebec City according to Innu Oral Tradition In Christie Gordon ed Aboriginality and Governance A Multidisciplinary Approach Penticton Indian Reserve British Columbia Theytus Books pp 7 9 ISBN 1894778243 Vincent 2006 p 10 Vincent 2006 p 12 15 Vincent 2006 p 15 17 a b c Canada s Tibet The Killing of the Innu a report from Survival International PDF file Bell Lynne Williamson Janice 2002 In the Hands of the People A Conversation with Marjorie Beaucage In Beard William White Jerry eds North of Everything English Canadian Cinema Since 1980 University of Alberta ISBN 9780888643902 a b c d e Katrina Kieltyka Sierra Club fighting plan to buy Canadian power Say hydroelectric dams would harm indigenous people Legislative Gazette March 16 2009 p 21 available at Legislative Gazette archives Archived 2009 03 25 at the Wayback Machine pdf file Retrieved March 20 2009 Speck Frank G 1917 Medicine Practices of the Northeastern Algonquians Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Americanists Pp 303 321 page 313 Naskapi and Montagnais Innu Legends Folklore Myths and Traditional Indian Stories Tshakapesh Chakabesh dwarf hero of the Innu and Cree Meet Canada s first Innu MP the Bloc s Bernard Cleary The Hill Times November 8 2004 Sylvain Turcotte Sharon Fontaine Ishpatao se plait a jouer Le Nord Cotier August 2 2022 a b Kashtin Encyclopedia of Music in Canada gt Pop Groups Historica Dominion 2009 Archived from the original on May 18 2005 Retrieved 2009 10 03 Penashue appointed to federal cabinet Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 2011 05 18 Retrieved 2011 05 18 General bibliography editRogers Edward S and Leacock Eleanor 1981 Montagnais Naskapi In J Helm Ed Handbook of North American Indians Subarctic Vol 6 pp 169 189 Washington Smithsonian Institution External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Innu Official website of the Innu Nation of Labrador Official website of the Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach Quebec Article from The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition on the difference between Naskapi and Montagnais Website of the Tshikapisk Foundation a non profit Innu organization focussing on social and cultural renewal Virtual Museum of Canada Tipatshimuna Innu stories from the land Distinctions between Naskapi Montagnais and Innu Montagnais Indians Quebec Article in the Catholic Encyclopedia CBC Digital Archives Davis Inlet Innu community in crisis Montagnais History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Innu amp oldid 1189250039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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