The Innut ('People') -- singular: Innu/ Ilnu ('man, person') -- formerly called Montagnais (; French for 'Hill people'), are the Indigenous Canadians who inhabit northeastern Labrador in present-day Newfoundland and Labrador and some portions of Quebec. They refer to their traditional homeland as Nitassinan ('Our Land', ᓂᑕᔅᓯᓇᓐ) or Innu-assi ('Innu Land').
The ancestors of the modern First Nations were known to have lived on these lands as for many thousands of years. To support their seasonal hunting migrations, they created portable tents made of animal skins. Their subsistence activities were historically centred on hunting and trapping Reindeer, moose, deer, and small game.
Their language, which changed over time from Old Montagnais to Innu language (popularly known since the French colonial era as Montagnais), is spoken throughout Nitassinan, with certain dialect differences. It is part of the Cree language–Montagnais–Naskapi language dialect continuum, and is unrelated to the Inuit languages of other nearby peoples.
The "Innu/Ilnu" consist of two regional tribal groups, with the Innus of Nutashkuan being the southernmost group and the Naskapi being the northernmost group. Both groups differ in dialect and partly also in their way of life and culture. These differences include:
Today, about 28,960 people of Innu origin live in various Indian settlements and Indian reserves in Quebec and Labrador. To avoid confusion with the Inuit, who belong to the peoples, today only the singular form "Innu/Ilnu" is used for the Innu, members of the large Cree-language family. The plural form of " Innut/ Innuat/ Ilnuatsh" has been abandoned.
The word Naskapi was first recorded by French colonists in the 17th century. They applied it to distant Innu groups who were beyond the reach of Catholic missionary influence. It was particularly applied to those people living in the lands that bordered Ungava Bay and the northern Labrador coast, near the Inuit communities of northern Quebec and northern Labrador. Gradually it came to refer to the people known today as the Naskapi First Nation.
The Naskapi are traditionally peoples, in contrast with the more sedentary Montagnais, who establish settled territories.
The Mushuau Innuat (plural), while related to the Naskapi, split off from the tribe in the 1900s. They were subject to a government relocation program at Davis Inlet. Some of the families of the Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach have close relatives in the Cree village of Whapmagoostui, on the eastern shore of Hudson Bay.
Since 1990, the Montagnais people have generally chosen to be officially referred to as the Innu, which means human being in Innu-aimun. The Naskapi have continued to use the word Naskapi.
The Innu were historically allied with neighbouring Atikamekw, Wolastoqiyik (Maliseet) and Algonquin people peoples against their enemies, the Algonquian-speaking Mi'kmaq and Iroquoian-speaking Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy (known as Haudenosaunee. During the Beaver Wars (1609–1701), the Iroquois repeatedly invaded the Innu territories from their homelands south of the Great Lakes. They took women and young males as captive slaves, and plundered their hunting grounds in search of more furs. Since these raids were made by the Iroquois with unprecedented brutality, the Innu themselves adopted the torment, torture, and cruelty of their enemies.
The Naskapi, on the other hand, usually had to confront the southward advancing Inuit in the east of the peninsula.
Innu oral tradition describes the original encounters of the Innu and the French explorers led by Samuel de Champlain as fraught with distrust. Neither group understood the language of the other, and the Innu were concerned about the motives of the French explorers.
The French asked permission to settle on the Innu's coastal land, which the Innu called Uepishtikueiau. This eventually developed as Quebec City. According to oral tradition, the Innu at first declined their request. The French demonstrated their ability to farm wheat on the land and promised they would share their bounty with the Innu in the future, which the Innu accepted.
Two distinct versions of the oral history describe the outcome. In the first, the French used gifts of farmed food and manufactured goods to encourage the Innu to become dependent on them. Then, the French changed it to a mercantile relationship: trading these items to the Innu in exchange for furs. When the nomadic Innu went inland for the winter, the French increased the size and population of their settlement considerably, eventually completely displacing the Innu.
The second, and more widespread, version of the oral history describes a more immediate conflict. In this version, the Innu taught the French how to survive in their traditional lands. Once the French had learned enough to survive on their own, they began to resent the Innu. The French began to attack the Innu, who retaliated in an attempt to reclaim their ancestral territory. The Innu had a disadvantage in numbers and weaponry, and eventually began to avoid the area rather than risk further defeat. During this conflict, the French colonists took many Innu women as wives. French women did not immigrate to New France in the early period.
French explorer Samuel de Champlain eventually became involved in the Innu's conflict with the Iroquois, who were ranging north from their traditional territory around the Great Lakes in present-day New York and Pennsylvania. On July 29, 1609, at Ticonderoga or Crown Point, New York, (historians are not sure which of these two places), Champlain and his party encountered a group of Iroquois, likely Mohawk people, who were the easternmost tribe of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy. A battle began the next day. As two hundred Iroquois advanced on Champlain's position, a native guide pointed out the three enemy chiefs to the French. According to legend, Champlain fired his arquebus and killed two of the Mohawk chiefs with one shot; one of his men shot and killed the third. The Mohawk reportedly fled the scene. Although the French also traded extensively with the Mohawk and other Iroquois, and converted some to Catholicism, they also continued to have armed conflicts with them.
The following are bands of the Montagnais-Naksapi in the 17th century:
The Innu people of Labrador formally organized the Naskapi Montagnais Innu Association in 1976 to protect their rights, lands, and way of life against industrialization and other outside forces. The organization changed its name to the Innu Nation in 1990 and functions today as the governing body of the Labrador Innu. The group has won recognition for its members as Indian Register under Canada's Indian Act in 2002 and is currently involved in land claim and self-governance negotiations with the federal and provincial governments.
In addition to the Innu Nation, residents at both Natuashish and Sheshatshiu elect Band government to represent community concerns. The chiefs of both councils sit on the Innu Nation's board of directors and the three groups work in cooperation with one another.
The Innu Nation's efforts to raise awareness about the environmental impacts of a mining project in Voisey's Bay were documented in Marjorie Beaucage's 1997 film Ntapueu ... i am telling the truth.
By 2000, the Innu island community of Davis Inlet asked the Canadian government to assist with a local addiction public health crisis. At their request, the community was relocated to a nearby mainland site, now known as Natuashish. At the same time, the Canadian government created the Natuashish and Sheshatshiu band councils under the Indian Act.
The Innu community, the Sierra Club, and the National Lawyers Guild are fighting to prevent this proposed contract, which would have to be approved by New York's Governor, under his regulatory authority. The problem is that construction of required electric transmission lines would hinder the Innu's Hunter-gatherer:
Chief Grégoire's comments at a press conference in Albany, New York were translated, but whether from French or Innu-aimun is not clear.
Both genders wore necklaces made of bone and bead. Smoke pipes were used by both genders, marked for women as shorter. If a man killed a bear, it was a sign of joy and initiation into adulthood and the man would wear a necklace made from the bear's claws.
Plants traditionally eaten included raspberries, blueberries, strawberries, cherries, , , crab apples, red martagon bulbs, Apios americana, and maple-tree sap for sweetening. Cornmeal was traded with other First Nations peoples, such as the Iroquois, Algonquin, and Abenaki, and made into apon (cornbread), which sometimes also included oat or wheat flour when it became available. Pine needle tea was meant to keep away infections and colds resulting from the harsh weather.
Other important later films set in Innu communities have included the narrative feature films Le Dep, Mesnak and Kuessipan, and the documentary films and Call Me Human.
Montagnais, Naskapi or Innu
Innu communities
Labrador communities
Mushuau Innu First Nation 1,210 Natuashish 1,115 Sheshatshiu Innu First Nation 1,994 Sheshatshiu 1,773
Quebec communities
Conseil tribal Mamit Innuat
Innus of Ekuanitshit 732 Mingan 672 Première Nation des Innus de Nutashkuan 1,274 Nutashkuan 1,148 Montagnais de Pakua Shipi (St-Augustin Indian Settlement) 413 Pakuashipi 41 Montagnais de Unamen Shipu 1,286 Romaine 2 1,135
Conseil tribal Mamuitun
Innu Nation of Matimekush-Lac John 1,065 Lac-John 3,621 Matimekosh Innu Takuaikan Uashat Mak Mani-Utenam 5,039 Maliotenam 3,621 Uashat Innue Essipit 2,032 Essipit 261 Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation 11,037 Mashteuiatsh 2,115 Pessamit Innu Band 4,185 Pessamit (Pessamit) 2,849
Kawawachikamach
Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach 817 Kawawachikamach
(Kawawachikamach (Naskapi village municipality))704
History
Historical bands
By 1850, the Chisedec, Oumamiwek, and Papinachois had disappeared or been renamed, and many new bands in the north of Nitassinan were discovered:
Present status
Labrador Innu organizations and land claims
Davis Inlet, Labrador
Kawawachikamach, Quebec
New York Power Authority controversy
Natuashish and Sheshatshiu, Newfoundland and Labrador
Culture
Ethnobotany
Traditional crafts
Traditional clothing, style and accessories
Housing
Traditional foods
Buckskin
Mythology
Film and television
Transportation
Notable people
See also
Notes
Citations
General bibliography
External links
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