First Nations Music for Land, Love, and Laughter

Celebrating the Music and Culture of Indigenous Peoples

Grades
K-12

Background and History

Families Working Together

First Nations people harvested food and traditional medicines from the earth, which they called Mother Earth, in the fall. They picked various berries and mint for food and took traditional plants like tobacco, fungus, sage, sweetgrass, pine, and cedar for medicines. Different plants and roots were used for different ailments and sicknesses. For instance, “rat root,” also called muskrat’s food, grows in the water and is a common medicine that is still used today for a cold, a cough, a sore tooth, or a sore throat. Whatever was taken from Mother Earth was replaced by laying down tobacco in its place as an offering of thanks and gratitude.

Parents’ roles

All family members helped in hunting and harvesting as a part of survival. Men and older boys would hunt, trap, and fish, and the women and older girls would gather berries, mint, wild rice, and wild carrots and onions. The men and boys would travel and hunt farther away from the camp, and the women and girls would gather closer to the camp. The mothers would take the babies along in moss bags carried on their backs as they travelled and made baby swings out of rope made from hide when stopped at their gathering places. Everyone worked together to help in everyday chores and to prepare for the winter. 

Children’s roles

The boys started practicing their hunting skills by hunting little animals such as rabbits, squirrels, and prairie chickens with bows and arrows and slingshots. The girls made dolls out of straw and learned to sew doll clothes. They also learned how to cook. In the spring when there was a lot of water around the camps, the children would dig little ditches to create streams to divert the water away from the camp. They would be rewarded with tiny carved canoes, and the children would put pebbles inside and watch them float down their streams. Boredom was not a part of everyday living on the land because there was always something to do.

Grandparents’ roles

In the winter months, the grandparents told legends to the children before bed. The legends were similar to boogeyman legends but each of the legends had a lesson to teach about respecting and interacting with each other. Disciplining of children was done through these legends, to teach, about the consequences of unacceptable behaviour.

Animal Uses

First Nations people hunted moose, deer, caribou, buffalo, and elk in the fall. When they killed an animal, they thanked the animal’s spirit for giving up its life to feed the people. The animal meat would be cut up to make dry meat and pemmican (pemmican is pounded dry meat mixed with berries and animal fat). Pemmican provided food in the long winter months and could be stored for long periods of time when food was scarce. Fats were an important part of the diet for cooking. Tanned moose hides were used for clothing and other items such as moccasins, mittens, vests, drums, etc. The rawhides were used for drums and rattles. Rawhides could be sewn together to make tipi shelters before canvas was used. Bear hides were used as blankets or rugs on the tipi floor. Rabbit skins were used as liners inside moccasins, and newborn babies were wrapped in rabbit skin to keep them warm. Muskeg moss was collected and dried to use inside of babies’ moss bags, to prevent skin rashes. No part of the animal was wasted; every part was used. For example, the antlers were made into gun racks or used for hanging jackets, pots, pans, etc. They used the leg bones for tools such as scrapers and knives.

When a young boy successfully hunted his first moose, there was a large feast to celebrate his accomplishment, because this meant food in the winter, clothing to keep warm, and new tools for survival.

Traditional Games

Traditional games were created to play for enjoyment and to pass the time after the work was done. Adults, children, and even visitors played together.