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Odanak

Odanak is an Abenaki First Nations reserve in the Central Quebec region, Quebec, Canada. The mostly First Nations population as of the Canada 2021 Census was 481. The territory is located near the mouth of the Saint-François River at its confluence with the St. Lawrence River. It is partly within the limits of Pierreville and across the river from Saint-François-du-Lac. Odanak is an Abenaki word meaning "in the village".

Odanak
Saint-François-de-Sales church
Location within Nicolet-Yamaska RCM.
Odanak
Location in southern Quebec.
Odanak
Odanak (Quebec)
Coordinates: 46°04′N 72°50′W / 46.067°N 72.833°W / 46.067; -72.833[1]
Country Canada
Province Quebec
RegionCentre-du-Québec
RCMNone
Constitutedunspecified
Government
 • TypeBand council
 • Federal ridingBas-Richelieu—Nicolet—Bécancour
 • Prov. ridingNicolet-Bécancour
Area
 • Total5.70 km2 (2.20 sq mi)
 • Land5.61 km2 (2.17 sq mi)
Population
 • Total481
 • Density85.8/km2 (222/sq mi)
 • Dwellings
243
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Area code450
Access Routes[5] R-132
R-226

History edit

Beginning about 1000 CE, Iroquoian-speaking people settled along the St. Lawrence River, where they practised agriculture along with hunting and fishing. Archeological surveys have revealed that by 1300, they built fortified villages similar to those seen and described by French explorer Jacques Cartier in the mid-16th century, when he visited Hochelaga and Stadacona. By 1600, however, the villages and people were gone. Since the 1950s, historians and anthropologists have used archeological and linguistic evidence to develop a consensus that the people formed a distinct ethnic group, whom they have called St. Lawrence Iroquoians. They spoke Laurentian and were separate from the powerful Iroquois confederacy of nations that developed in present-day New York and Pennsylvania along the southern edges of the Great Lakes.[6]

Their disappearance by 1600 is believed to be due to attacks and decimation from the Mohawk Nation of the Iroquois League; they stood to gain the most by getting control of the hunting grounds along the St. Lawrence River and dominating the fur trade route on the river above Tadoussac, which was under Montagnais control. By the time of Samuel de Champlain's arrival, the St. Lawrence River valley was essentially uninhabited; the Mohawk reserved it for use as hunting grounds and as a path for war parties.[6]

As French missionaries worked in present-day Quebec and central-western New York with native peoples in the late 17th and early 18th century, they established mission villages for converted natives near the colonial towns of Quebec City and Montreal. The Abenaki who converted to Catholicism were allied with the French. Evidence supports the tradition that St. Francis was first occupied by the Sokoki (Ozogwakiakas in Abenaki) as early as 1660, with as many as twenty families; the earliest Sokoki baptism recorded in the area was nearby in Trois-Rivières in 1658. The Sokoki were a band or tribe within the larger Abenaki group. Central Maine was formerly inhabited by people of the Androscoggin tribe, also known as Arosaguntacook. The Androscoggin were a tribe in the Abenaki nation.

They were driven out of the area by Europeans in 1690 sometime after King Philip's War (1675-1676). They were relocated west at St. Francis, Canada. During the French and Indian War (the Seven Years' War), this settlement was destroyed and burnt by Rogers' Rangers in 1759. The Abenaki and some St. Francis residents participated in raids against English settlements. These were sometimes organized by Sébastien Rale and Abenaki chief Grey Lock in Father Rale's War along the frontiers of New England in the early 18th century. Other Abenaki tribes suffered several severe defeats in reprisal during Father Rale's War, particularly the capture of Norridgewock in 1724 and the defeat of the Pequawket in 1725, which greatly reduced their numbers.

Odanak was first established in the year 1700. While traveling along the banks of the St François river the Jesuit Priest Jacques Bigot made the decision to relocate the Jesuit mission “La Mission de Saint François de Sale” that was established in 1684 at the mouth of the Chaudière river to the banks of the St Francois river following years of successive crop failure due to agricultural overexploitation.[7] The new mission was to be established in close proximity to a small village of both Abenaki and Sokokis that Bigot had previously observed during his travels throughout the region in the winter of 1684–1685.[8] At the request of the Governor General of New France Louis-Hector de Callière and the Intendant Jean Bochart de Champigny, Marguerite Hertel the widow of Jean Crevier de Saint-François and her son Joseph Crevier granted one “demi lieu” of land from their seigneury to the Abenakis which was accepted on behalf of Bigot on which the new mission was to be constructed.[9]

In 1704 the French King Louis XIV ordered the Kings Engineer, Levasseur De Néré to draw up a plan in order fortify the Jesuit Mission during the War of Spanish Succession to provide protection for the families of the Abenaki and Sokoki warriors who had sided with the French against the English and the Iroquois during the war and in prior conflicts. Governor Callière subsequently ordered the construction of defensive features such as redoubts and a 4.7 m high palisade that was to be reinforced with stone bastions.[10] During this war Abenaki warriors were involved in numerous raids and conflicts such as the infamous Deerfield Raid of February 29, 1704 in which 112 English captives were taken.[11]

In the summer of 1711 Odanak was temporarily abandoned due to the threats posed by Admiral Walker's and Colonel Nicholson's planned assault on Quebec City. The male Abenaki warriors of the village were called up to Quebec to take part in the defence of the city while the woman and children were temporarily relocated to Trois-Rivières and Montréal. Following the failure and withdrawal of Admiral Walker's fleet the Abenakis would once again return to Odanak.[12]

In 1706 the village was moved from its original location on the north-eastern bank of the St Francois river downstream, near the current location of Pierreville in order to accommodate a growing population. In 1715 the village would be relocated once more. This time moving further downstream to the site of its current location situated high upon the bank of the St. Francois river to protect against seasonal flooding.[13]

Following the conclusion of “Dummers War” in 1724, Odanak would be further reinforced by the arrival of a contingent of 300 Abenaki warriors and their families from the Narransouac and Pentagouet missions in Maine.

On October 4, 1759, Odanak was sacked and destroyed by a contingent of 200 men under the command of Major Robert Rogers. Rogers was ordered by Jeffrey Amherst to seek retaliation for numerous raids and attacks perpetrated by Abenaki warriors on British settlements. Rogers was able to take advantage of the absence of the majority of Abenaki warriors who were serving under the command of French General Montcalm in the defense of Quebec City.[14] Rogers men subsequently destroyed and set fire to entirety of the village destroying the mission's records and archives. Casualty estimates from this attack vary considerably depending on the accounts with Roger's claiming 200 dead and 20 captives (both women and children) while French accounts claim 30 dead, 20 of whom were identified as being women and children.[15] This would mark the last major event that took place during the era of New France.

Demographics edit

 
Flag of the First Nation Abénakis of Odanak

Population edit

Population estimates prior to 1759 are difficult due to the loss of records associated with the raid conducted by Major Rogers on October 4, 1759.

Population trend:[16]

Census Population Change (%)
2021 481   7.1%
2016 449   1.6%
2011 457   2.6%
2006 469   10.4%
2001 425   8.4%
1996 392   17.7%
1991 333   27.1%
1986 262   14.9%
1981 228   0%
1976 228   6%
1971 215   10%
1966 239   10.6%
1961 216   13.6%
1956 250   11.1%
1951 225   26.9%
1941 308   2.2%
1931 315   7.9%
1921 342 N/A
1749 200 warriors + families[17] N/A
1711 260 warriors + families[18] or 300 inhabitants + 260 warriors[19] N/A
1698 335 (census of mission prioer to relocation) N/A

Language edit

Mother tongue language (2021)[20]

Language Population Pct (%)
French only 435 90.6%
English only 35 7.3%
Both English and French 5 1%
Other languages 5 1%

Arts and culture edit

Odanak is the site of the Musée des Abénakis (Abenaki Museum), dedicated to the history, culture and art of the Western Abenaki people.

Alanis Obomsawin (Abenaki), is a filmmaker who grew up in Odanak. Her documentary, Waban-Aki: People from Where the Sun Rises[21] (2006) is a tribute to the people of St. Francis. Her most recent documentary film Gene Boy Came Home (2007) tells the story of Eugene "Gene Boy" Benedict. He was raised in Odanak. As a young man, he fought in the US Marine Corps against the North Vietnamese in the Vietnam War before returning to his home village.

Education edit

In 2011, the only First Nations CEGEP in Québec opened its doors in Odanak.

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Banque de noms de lieux du Québec: Reference number 45182". toponymie.gouv.qc.ca (in French). Commission de toponymie du Québec.
  2. ^ a b Ministère des Affaires municipales, des Régions et de l'Occupation du territoire: Odanak
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2009-06-21.
  4. ^ a b 2021 Statistics Canada Census Profile: Odanak
  5. ^ Official Transport Quebec Road Map
  6. ^ a b James F. Pendergast. (1998). "The Confusing Identities Attributed to Stadacona and Hochelaga", Journal of Canadian Studies, Volume 32, pp. 149-156, accessed 3 Feb 2010
  7. ^ Day, Gordon M. The identity of the Saint Francis Indians. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada,1981.p.5.
  8. ^ Treyvaud, Geneviève and Michel Plourde. The Abenakis of Odanak, an Archaeological Journey. Quebec: Marquis, 2017.p.45.
  9. ^ Charland, Thomas Marie. Histoire des Abénakis d'Odanak (1675-1937). Montréal: Éditions du Lévrier, 1964. p.23.
  10. ^ Treyvaud, Geneviève and Michel Plourde. The Abenakis of Odanak, an Archaeological Journey. Quebec: Marquis, 2017.p.86.
  11. ^ Haefeli, Evan, and Kevin Sweeney Captors and captives: the 1704 French and Indian raid on Deerfield. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press,2003.p.7.
  12. ^ Charland, Thomas Marie. Histoire des Abénakis d'Odanak (1675-1937). Montréal: Éditions du Lévrier, 1964. p.51.
  13. ^ Day, Gordon M. The identity of the Saint Francis Indians. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada,1981.p.35.
  14. ^ Treyvaud, Geneviève and Michel Plourde. The Abenakis of Odanak, an Archaeological Journey. Quebec: Marquis, 2017.p.50.
  15. ^ Day, Gordon M. The identity of the Saint Francis Indians. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada,1981.p.42.
  16. ^ Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006, 2011, 2016, 2021 census
  17. ^ Day, Gordon M. The identity of the Saint Francis Indians. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada,1981.p.41.
  18. ^ Treyvaud, Geneviève and Michel Plourde. The Abenakis of Odanak, an Archaeological Journey. Quebec: Marquis, 2017.p.48.
  19. ^ Sévigny, Andrée. Les Abénaquis: habitat et migrations, 17e et 18e siècles. Montréal: Bellarmin, 1976
  20. ^ 2021 Statistics Canada Community Profile: Odanak
  21. ^ National Film Board of Canada
  22. ^ Voyageur, Cora J.; Beavon, Dan; Newhouse, Davud (2011). Hidden in Plain Sight Contributions of Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture, Volume II. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442663374.
  23. ^ "Christine Sioui Wawanoloath" (in French). Terres en vues/Land InSights. from the original on 2016-08-13.
  24. ^ Chamberlain, Alexander F. (April 1903). "Algonkian Words in American English: A Study in the Contact of the White Man and the Indian". The Journal of American Folklore. 16 (61). American Folklore Society: 128–129. doi:10.2307/533199. JSTOR 533199.
  25. ^ "Biography of Alexis Wawanoloath". Dictionnaire des parlementaires du Québec de 1792 à nos jours (in French). National Assembly of Quebec.
  26. ^ Canada, Supreme Court of (2001-01-01). "Supreme Court of Canada - Biography - Michelle O'Bonsawin". www.scc-csc.ca. Retrieved 2023-06-28.
  27. ^ Boisvert, Nick (19 Aug 2022). "Michelle O'Bonsawin becomes 1st Indigenous person nominated to Supreme Court of Canada". CBC News. Retrieved 19 Aug 2022.

External links edit

  • Conseil des Abénakis d'Odanak, official website
  • (in French) Abenaki Museum, Odanak, Quebec
  • Map of Odanak (Google Maps)



odanak, abenaki, first, nations, reserve, central, quebec, region, quebec, canada, mostly, first, nations, population, canada, 2021, census, territory, located, near, mouth, saint, françois, river, confluence, with, lawrence, river, partly, within, limits, pie. Odanak is an Abenaki First Nations reserve in the Central Quebec region Quebec Canada The mostly First Nations population as of the Canada 2021 Census was 481 The territory is located near the mouth of the Saint Francois River at its confluence with the St Lawrence River It is partly within the limits of Pierreville and across the river from Saint Francois du Lac Odanak is an Abenaki word meaning in the village OdanakFirst Nations reserveSaint Francois de Sales churchLocation within Nicolet Yamaska RCM OdanakLocation in southern Quebec Show map of Southern QuebecOdanakOdanak Quebec Show map of QuebecCoordinates 46 04 N 72 50 W 46 067 N 72 833 W 46 067 72 833 1 Country CanadaProvince QuebecRegionCentre du QuebecRCMNoneConstitutedunspecifiedGovernment 2 3 TypeBand council Federal ridingBas Richelieu Nicolet Becancour Prov ridingNicolet BecancourArea 2 4 Total5 70 km2 2 20 sq mi Land5 61 km2 2 17 sq mi Population 2021 4 Total481 Density85 8 km2 222 sq mi Dwellings243Time zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT Area code450Access Routes 5 R 132 R 226 Contents 1 History 2 Demographics 2 1 Population 2 2 Language 3 Arts and culture 4 Education 5 Notable people 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editBeginning about 1000 CE Iroquoian speaking people settled along the St Lawrence River where they practised agriculture along with hunting and fishing Archeological surveys have revealed that by 1300 they built fortified villages similar to those seen and described by French explorer Jacques Cartier in the mid 16th century when he visited Hochelaga and Stadacona By 1600 however the villages and people were gone Since the 1950s historians and anthropologists have used archeological and linguistic evidence to develop a consensus that the people formed a distinct ethnic group whom they have called St Lawrence Iroquoians They spoke Laurentian and were separate from the powerful Iroquois confederacy of nations that developed in present day New York and Pennsylvania along the southern edges of the Great Lakes 6 Their disappearance by 1600 is believed to be due to attacks and decimation from the Mohawk Nation of the Iroquois League they stood to gain the most by getting control of the hunting grounds along the St Lawrence River and dominating the fur trade route on the river above Tadoussac which was under Montagnais control By the time of Samuel de Champlain s arrival the St Lawrence River valley was essentially uninhabited the Mohawk reserved it for use as hunting grounds and as a path for war parties 6 As French missionaries worked in present day Quebec and central western New York with native peoples in the late 17th and early 18th century they established mission villages for converted natives near the colonial towns of Quebec City and Montreal The Abenaki who converted to Catholicism were allied with the French Evidence supports the tradition that St Francis was first occupied by the Sokoki Ozogwakiakas in Abenaki as early as 1660 with as many as twenty families the earliest Sokoki baptism recorded in the area was nearby in Trois Rivieres in 1658 The Sokoki were a band or tribe within the larger Abenaki group Central Maine was formerly inhabited by people of the Androscoggin tribe also known as Arosaguntacook The Androscoggin were a tribe in the Abenaki nation They were driven out of the area by Europeans in 1690 sometime after King Philip s War 1675 1676 They were relocated west at St Francis Canada During the French and Indian War the Seven Years War this settlement was destroyed and burnt by Rogers Rangers in 1759 The Abenaki and some St Francis residents participated in raids against English settlements These were sometimes organized by Sebastien Rale and Abenaki chief Grey Lock in Father Rale s War along the frontiers of New England in the early 18th century Other Abenaki tribes suffered several severe defeats in reprisal during Father Rale s War particularly the capture of Norridgewock in 1724 and the defeat of the Pequawket in 1725 which greatly reduced their numbers Odanak was first established in the year 1700 While traveling along the banks of the St Francois river the Jesuit Priest Jacques Bigot made the decision to relocate the Jesuit mission La Mission de Saint Francois de Sale that was established in 1684 at the mouth of the Chaudiere river to the banks of the St Francois river following years of successive crop failure due to agricultural overexploitation 7 The new mission was to be established in close proximity to a small village of both Abenaki and Sokokis that Bigot had previously observed during his travels throughout the region in the winter of 1684 1685 8 At the request of the Governor General of New France Louis Hector de Calliere and the Intendant Jean Bochart de Champigny Marguerite Hertel the widow of Jean Crevier de Saint Francois and her son Joseph Crevier granted one demi lieu of land from their seigneury to the Abenakis which was accepted on behalf of Bigot on which the new mission was to be constructed 9 In 1704 the French King Louis XIV ordered the Kings Engineer Levasseur De Nere to draw up a plan in order fortify the Jesuit Mission during the War of Spanish Succession to provide protection for the families of the Abenaki and Sokoki warriors who had sided with the French against the English and the Iroquois during the war and in prior conflicts Governor Calliere subsequently ordered the construction of defensive features such as redoubts and a 4 7 m high palisade that was to be reinforced with stone bastions 10 During this war Abenaki warriors were involved in numerous raids and conflicts such as the infamous Deerfield Raid of February 29 1704 in which 112 English captives were taken 11 In the summer of 1711 Odanak was temporarily abandoned due to the threats posed by Admiral Walker s and Colonel Nicholson s planned assault on Quebec City The male Abenaki warriors of the village were called up to Quebec to take part in the defence of the city while the woman and children were temporarily relocated to Trois Rivieres and Montreal Following the failure and withdrawal of Admiral Walker s fleet the Abenakis would once again return to Odanak 12 In 1706 the village was moved from its original location on the north eastern bank of the St Francois river downstream near the current location of Pierreville in order to accommodate a growing population In 1715 the village would be relocated once more This time moving further downstream to the site of its current location situated high upon the bank of the St Francois river to protect against seasonal flooding 13 Following the conclusion of Dummers War in 1724 Odanak would be further reinforced by the arrival of a contingent of 300 Abenaki warriors and their families from the Narransouac and Pentagouet missions in Maine On October 4 1759 Odanak was sacked and destroyed by a contingent of 200 men under the command of Major Robert Rogers Rogers was ordered by Jeffrey Amherst to seek retaliation for numerous raids and attacks perpetrated by Abenaki warriors on British settlements Rogers was able to take advantage of the absence of the majority of Abenaki warriors who were serving under the command of French General Montcalm in the defense of Quebec City 14 Rogers men subsequently destroyed and set fire to entirety of the village destroying the mission s records and archives Casualty estimates from this attack vary considerably depending on the accounts with Roger s claiming 200 dead and 20 captives both women and children while French accounts claim 30 dead 20 of whom were identified as being women and children 15 This would mark the last major event that took place during the era of New France Demographics edit nbsp Flag of the First Nation Abenakis of OdanakPopulation edit Population estimates prior to 1759 are difficult due to the loss of records associated with the raid conducted by Major Rogers on October 4 1759 Population trend 16 Census Population Change 2021 481 nbsp 7 1 2016 449 nbsp 1 6 2011 457 nbsp 2 6 2006 469 nbsp 10 4 2001 425 nbsp 8 4 1996 392 nbsp 17 7 1991 333 nbsp 27 1 1986 262 nbsp 14 9 1981 228 nbsp 0 1976 228 nbsp 6 1971 215 nbsp 10 1966 239 nbsp 10 6 1961 216 nbsp 13 6 1956 250 nbsp 11 1 1951 225 nbsp 26 9 1941 308 nbsp 2 2 1931 315 nbsp 7 9 1921 342 N A1749 200 warriors families 17 N A1711 260 warriors families 18 or 300 inhabitants 260 warriors 19 N A1698 335 census of mission prioer to relocation N ALanguage edit Mother tongue language 2021 20 Language Population Pct French only 435 90 6 English only 35 7 3 Both English and French 5 1 Other languages 5 1 Arts and culture editOdanak is the site of the Musee des Abenakis Abenaki Museum dedicated to the history culture and art of the Western Abenaki people Alanis Obomsawin Abenaki is a filmmaker who grew up in Odanak Her documentary Waban Aki People from Where the Sun Rises 21 2006 is a tribute to the people of St Francis Her most recent documentary film Gene Boy Came Home 2007 tells the story of Eugene Gene Boy Benedict He was raised in Odanak As a young man he fought in the US Marine Corps against the North Vietnamese in the Vietnam War before returning to his home village Education editIn 2011 the only First Nations CEGEP in Quebec opened its doors in Odanak Notable people editAlanis Obomsawin born 1932 filmmaker musician singer 22 Christine Sioui Wawanoloath writer and artist living in Quebec 23 Elijah Tahamont 1855 1918 silent film actor Dark Cloud 24 Alexis Wawanoloath member of National Assembly of Quebec 25 Michelle O Bonsawin first Indigenous Supreme Court Justice in Canadian history 26 27 Mali Obomsawin musician community organizerSee also editList of municipalities in QuebecReferences edit Banque de noms de lieux du Quebec Reference number 45182 toponymie gouv qc ca in French Commission de toponymie du Quebec a b Ministere des Affaires municipales des Regions et de l Occupation du territoire Odanak Parliament of Canada Federal Riding History BAS RICHELIEU NICOLET BECANCOUR Quebec Archived from the original on 2009 06 09 Retrieved 2009 06 21 a b 2021 Statistics Canada Census Profile Odanak Official Transport Quebec Road Map a b James F Pendergast 1998 The Confusing Identities Attributed to Stadacona and Hochelaga Journal of Canadian Studies Volume 32 pp 149 156 accessed 3 Feb 2010 Day Gordon M The identity of the Saint Francis Indians Ottawa National Museums of Canada 1981 p 5 Treyvaud Genevieve and Michel Plourde The Abenakis of Odanak an Archaeological Journey Quebec Marquis 2017 p 45 Charland Thomas Marie Histoire des Abenakis d Odanak 1675 1937 Montreal Editions du Levrier 1964 p 23 Treyvaud Genevieve and Michel Plourde The Abenakis of Odanak an Archaeological Journey Quebec Marquis 2017 p 86 Haefeli Evan and Kevin Sweeney Captors and captives the 1704 French and Indian raid on Deerfield Amherst University of Massachusetts Press 2003 p 7 Charland Thomas Marie Histoire des Abenakis d Odanak 1675 1937 Montreal Editions du Levrier 1964 p 51 Day Gordon M The identity of the Saint Francis Indians Ottawa National Museums of Canada 1981 p 35 Treyvaud Genevieve and Michel Plourde The Abenakis of Odanak an Archaeological Journey Quebec Marquis 2017 p 50 Day Gordon M The identity of the Saint Francis Indians Ottawa National Museums of Canada 1981 p 42 Statistics Canada 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 2021 census Day Gordon M The identity of the Saint Francis Indians Ottawa National Museums of Canada 1981 p 41 Treyvaud Genevieve and Michel Plourde The Abenakis of Odanak an Archaeological Journey Quebec Marquis 2017 p 48 Sevigny Andree Les Abenaquis habitat et migrations 17e et 18e siecles Montreal Bellarmin 1976 2021 Statistics Canada Community Profile Odanak National Film Board of Canada Voyageur Cora J Beavon Dan Newhouse Davud 2011 Hidden in Plain Sight Contributions of Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture Volume II Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 9781442663374 Christine Sioui Wawanoloath in French Terres en vues Land InSights Archived from the original on 2016 08 13 Chamberlain Alexander F April 1903 Algonkian Words in American English A Study in the Contact of the White Man and the Indian The Journal of American Folklore 16 61 American Folklore Society 128 129 doi 10 2307 533199 JSTOR 533199 Biography of Alexis Wawanoloath Dictionnaire des parlementaires du Quebec de 1792 a nos jours in French National Assembly of Quebec Canada Supreme Court of 2001 01 01 Supreme Court of Canada Biography Michelle O Bonsawin www scc csc ca Retrieved 2023 06 28 Boisvert Nick 19 Aug 2022 Michelle O Bonsawin becomes 1st Indigenous person nominated to Supreme Court of Canada CBC News Retrieved 19 Aug 2022 External links editConseil des Abenakis d Odanak official website Waban Aki Nation Quebec in French Abenaki Museum Odanak Quebec Map of Odanak Google Maps Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Odanak amp oldid 1168859415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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