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  1. Apr 7, 2023 · The Ojibwe people, also known as Anishinaabe, Chippewa, or Ojibwa, are an indigenous people from North America. They are one of the largest Indigenous groups in Canada and the United States, and have a long and rich history. The Ojibwe have lived in what is now Canada and the United States for thousands of years.

  2. Nov 15, 2013 · The seven Ojibwe reservations in Minnesota are Bois Forte (Nett Lake), Fond du Lac, Grand Portage, Leech Lake, Mille Lacs, White Earth, and Red Lake. The name "Ojibwe" may be drawn from either the puckered seam of the Ojibwe moccasin or the Ojibwe custom of writing on birch bark. The Ojibwe have always hunted and fished, made maple sugar and ...

  3. Feb 6, 2023 · Formed in 1984, GLIFWC represents eleven Ojibwe tribes in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan who reserved hunting, fishing and gathering rights in the 1837, 1842, and 1854 Treaties with the United States government. GLIFWC provides natural resource management expertise, conservation enforcement, legal and policy analysis, and public information ...

  4. The variety of Ojibwe used in the Ojibwe People's Dictionary is the Central Southwestern Ojibwe spoken in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Canadian border lakes communities. Today, it is spoken mainly by elders over the age of 70. Ethnologue reports 5,000 speakers of Southwestern Chippewa (Lewis, 2009), but a 2009 language census by language activists ...

  5. Oct 18, 2023 · The Ojibwe tribe, also known as the Chippewa or Anishinaabe, is a Native American tribe that is part of the larger Algonquian-speaking group. They are primarily located in the Great Lakes region of the United States and Canada, with their ancestral lands spanning from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota to Ontario and Manitoba.

  6. Ojibwe Culture and History. Recorded history estimates that the Ojibwe occupied the territories around the Great Lakes as early as 1400, expanding westward until the 1600s (Sultzman, 2000). The Ojibway people were the largest and most powerful of all the tribes inhabiting the Great Lakes region of North America.

  7. Ojibwe History. The Ojibwe are an Algonkian-speaking tribe and constitute the largest Indian group north of Mexico. The Ojibwe stretch from present-day Ontario in eastern Canada all the way into Montana. Oral traditions of the Ojibwe, Ottawa, and Potawatomi assert that at one time all three tribes were one people who lived at the Straits of ...

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