Manito Aki Inakonigaawin has been an inherent law to Anishinaabe in Treaty #3 Territory since time immemorial.
The law governs relationships with the land and its inhabitants throughout daily life. This includes respecting lands and waters, giving offerings to spirits and Creator when you benefit from Mother Earth’s gifts, knowing your inherent rights as Treaty #3 members, and understanding your responsibility as a steward of the land.
At the beginning of time, Saagima Manito gave the Anishinaabe duties and responsibilities to protect, care for and respect the land. These duties were to last forever, in spirit, in breath and in all of life, for all of eternity. The spirit and intent of Manito Aki Inakonigaawin signifies the duty to respect and protect lands that may be effected from over-usage, degradation and un-ethical processes. Saagima Manito explained the Great Earth Law as a manner of thought, a way of feeling and a way of living. As a teaching, the law is difficult to translate to English, as it is engraved into Anishinaabe ways of life.
Click on the circles below to read about the importance of Manito Aki Inakonigaawin.
"I try to teach my kids, my grandkids, that this is, this is more important. This land is more important than anything else, anything else. And we, as Anishinaabe people are supposed to be the caretakers of this land and what we do, what we do affects seven generations." - Susan Smith, Couchiching First Nation, 2021
"Everybody has to be taught the Seven Teachings, in order for that to be Inakonigaawin. Manito Inakonigaawin. Everybody has to understand that."
"We thought what we have, we would never survive as a people. And Nibi is the relationship between us and the water. Water is essential for all of creation, without Nibi there would be nothing here. Yeah. Just dry, dry a desert. Nobody, no people, no plants, no insects, no nothing. That's the significance of water. It's a life giver. And the declaration was about protecting, protecting and rehabilitating our waterways." - Ogichidaa Francis Kavanaugh
"I'm not just thinking about myself. I'm thinking, I want my grandchildren and my great-grandchildren and theirs to also possibly have something that's good, and to have a good way of life and good things."
Respecting and upholding Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration is seen as the route to sovereignty for Anishinaabe in Treaty #3. Through engagement, potential pathways forward to upholding and enhancing GCT #3’s work with Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration were identified.
The pathways are broken into four categories that follow the Treaty #3 Anishinaabe Nation Four Directions Governance Model. Each category and it’s pathways forward are summarized below.
Respecting and upholding Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration is seen as the route to sovereignty for Anishinaabe in Treaty #3. Through engagement, potential pathways forward to upholding and enhancing GCT #3’s work with Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration were identified.
The pathways are broken into four categories that follow the Treaty #3 Anishinaabe Nation Four Directions Governance Model. Each category and it’s pathways forward are summarized below.
Education and knowledge transfer, including health, childcare, social services.
Responsibilities to land and waters, asserting rights to make decisions in Treaty #3 territory.
Considerations of language, ceremony, and healing as the source of Manito Aki Inakonigaawin’s authority.
The flow of funding, and the balance of economic development and protecting nibi & aki.
Each category has a set of pathways that are ranked by priority. The following are some of those pathways that have been determined crucial to take for GCT #3’s work in upholding Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration. For a full list of the pathways identified, read the Pathways Forward Report here.
Future vision includes increasing general knowledge of both Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration, making sure children grow up understanding key teachings and laws, increasing online platforms to share information, and seeing strong, healthy communities. The following are some of the key pathways forward can help achieve this vision:
Envisioning a future where nibi is clean, drinkable, and respected as a life-giver, and aki is healthy, thriving, and treated with care. These pathways will lead to the Anishinaabe Nation being able to assert their rights and responsibilities towards aki and nibi:
Prioritizing individuals’ spiritual connections to the aki and nibi, and using Anishinaabemowin to pass knowledge and culture across generations. These are some of the key cultural pathways forward:
The vision of economic governance revolves around creating and strengthening relationships with the Crown and proponents, and ensuring economic development is not in contradiction with the protection of aki and nibi. Manito Aki Inakonigaawin can help bring awareness to Western government bodies of their roles and responsibilities. Some of the key pathways forward include:
Waabanong (East): Environmental aspects of governance, includes how Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration inform and guide environment related decision-making within the Nation (GCT#3 and Communities) and externally with both the Crown and proponents.
Shaawanong (South): Cultural aspects of governance, includes the importance of ceremony as the source of Manito Aki Inakonigaawin’s authority, and the grounding of Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration in Anishinaabe law and knowledge systems. This section also discusses cultural aspects of the Anishinaabe Nation in Treaty #3, which represents the responsibility for, and relationship with, the lands and waters.
Ningabii’onong (West): Economic aspects of governance, includes how Anishinaabe Inakonigaawin (Anishinaabe laws) informs the distribution of benefits and creation of opportunities from resource projects. This section also includes decision making in relation to economic issues and opportunities.
Kiiwetinong (North): Social aspects of governance, includes the transfer of knowledge, the creation of resources to aid in understanding of Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration, and the inclusion of Manito Aki Inakonigaawin and the Nibi Declaration in school curriculum.
North
Social Committee
South
Cultural Committee
East
Cultural Committee
West
Economic Committee
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