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Ojibwa, or the Anishinaabe people, are one of the many native inhabitants of North America. ... Their ceremonies, rituals, songs, dances, and stories are what give the Ojibwa people their identity. ... The history of the Ojibwa people has a long past that can be traced back to an epic migration recorded on what is known as the Wallum Olum. The Wallum Olum was recorded on bark tablets and song sticks, this record is the oldest account of people in North America, dating back before 1600 b. ... The Wallum Olum describes a journey from the west to the Atlantic Ocean, of the dispersion of the people as they branched out and evolved into their own tribes. The Wallum Olum has references to encounters with people of the Rockies and Great Plains, the mound builders of the Mississippi, and also the people that became their enemy, the Iroquois. ... The ancestral community that was build there is estimated at over ten thousand people. ... With the promise of annuity payments and rations, the Ojibwa people of Wisconsin and Michigan were told to relocate to northwest Minnesota in the late in the fall. ... Through you, will the people live and live on. ...
There are more than just the few descriptions of the heritage that make up the Ojibwa people. ... There is presently an undertaking to teach young members the language of the Ojibwa people. The number of people speaking their native language is growing outside of the few elders who grew up in a household of native speakers. ... The scope and style of the tribes governing body varies by tribal community within the Ojibwa people. ... The Ojibwa people also provide political candidates on the national scope.
Approximate Word count = 2338 Approximate Pages = 9.4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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