FEDERAL APPEALS COURT AFFIRMS OJIBWE BANDS’ TREATY RIGHTS |
History of
the Ojibways Dream-Catchers of the Seventh Fire |
||
Dream-Catchers Home History of Dream-Catchers Gallery of Dream-Catchers Dream-Catcher Kits Weaving a Dream-Catcher Order Dream-Catchers Seventh Fire Prophecy-Protest-Principle History of the Little Shell Band of Ojibwe History of the Ojibways Ojibwe Culture and Language Native American Holocaust Native American Medicine Natural Serotonin Pycnogenol Photo Galleries Index The Littlest Acorn Stories Dream-Catchers Weave Creating Turtle Island Sage Ceremony for Dream-Catchers Larry Cloud-Morgan White Eagle Soaring Real Dream Catchers' links Comments about these Dream-Catchers |
Real Dream-Catchers teach spirit wisdoms of the Seventh Fire |
||
Real Dream-Catchers teach the wisdoms of the Seventh Fire, an Ojibwe Prophecy, that is being fulfilled at this moment. The Light-skinned Race is being shown the result of the Way of the Mind and the possibilities that reside in the Path of the Spirit. Real Dream-Catchers point the way. |
|||
Most Wisconsin and Upper Michigan Ojibwe bands which negotiated the 1837 and 1842 Treaties received their annuities by early autumn at La Pointe on Madeline Island–a cultural and spiritual center for Ojibwe people. Territorial Governor and Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Minnesota, Alexander Ramsey, worked with other officials to remove the Ojibwe from their homes in Wisconsin and Upper Michigan to Sandy Lake. The flow of annuity money and government aid to build Indian schools, agencies, and farms would create wealth for Ramsey and his supporters in Minnesota. President Zachary Taylor issued an executive order in February 1850 that sought to move Ojibwe Indians living east of the Mississippi River to their unceded lands. Initially stunned by the breach of the 1837 and 1842 Treaty terms, Ojibwe leaders recognized that the removal order clearly violated their agreement with the US. A broad coalition of supporters–missionary groups, newspapers, businessmen, and Wisconsin state legislators–rallied to oppose the removal effort, and band members refused to abandon their homes. |
See Real Dream Catchers' links
|