The 'Cree' are an
indigenous people of
North America who occupy an area from the
Rocky Mountains to the
Atlantic Ocean in both
Canada and the
United States. They now constitute the largest group of
First Nations people in Canada and are referred to as
Native Americans in the United States. The
Cree language is an
Algonquian language and was once the most widely spoken in northern North America. Currently, however, not all Crees speak Cree fluently and
English is more commonly used in Cree communities in the United States, Western Canada and
Ontario. In
Quebec, however, almost all Crees speak fluent Cree; English and
French are nevertheless used in the work place, public administration, and for external relations.
Skilled
buffalo hunters and horsemen, the Cree were allied to the
Assiniboine of the
Sioux before encountering English and French settlers in the
16th century.
Presently, the remaining Cree in the United States live on the
Rocky Boy Indian Reservation which is shared with the
Chippewa.
In Canada

Cree Girl (1928).
The Cree are the largest group of
First Nations in Canada, with over 200,000 members. This large number may be due to the Cree's traditional openness to inter-tribal marriage. The largest Cree band, and the second largest First Nations Band in Canada after the
Six Nations Iroquois is the
Lac La Ronge Band in northern
Saskatchewan.
The
Métis were traditionally the mixed offspring of Cree (or Ojibwa) and
French Canadian (or English or Scottish) heritage. According to the Canadian Government's Indian and Northern Affairs, the
Metis were historically the offspring of French fur traders and Prairie Cree women or, from unions of English or Scottish traders and Northern Dene women. It is now generally accepted though in academic circles that the term
Métis can be used to refer to any combination of persons of mixed Native with Non-Native heritage. Although, historical definitions for
Metis remain. Some
Anglo-Metis are also of Cree descent. Canada's Indian and Northern Affairs specifically but broadly define
Metis to be those persons of mixed First Nation and European ancestry.
The
Grand Council of the Crees in
Quebec calls its homeland ''Eeyou Istchee'' (
Cree for 'Land of the People'). Its current leader is Grand Chief
Matthew Mukash, formerly Deputy Grand Chief under
Ted Moses and more recently CEO of the
Whapmagoostui Eeyou Enterprise Development Corporation in
Quebec’s northern-most Cree community.
The Nishnawbe-Aski Nation (NAN) is a political group of Cree, Ojibwe and Oji-Cree descendants based in northern
Ontario. Its territory encompasses two thirds of the northern half of the province. It comprises 50 First Nation communities, further represented by regional Tribal Councils denoting each territorial area of Cree, Ojibwe and Oji-Cree peoples. The word ''nishnawbe'' means 'people' in all these related languages. Similarly, ''aski'' means 'land' in all the languages and is similar to the Quebec Cree word 'istchee'. Cree and Ojibwe are
Algonquian languages that share many similarities and are separated by subtle differences in dialects from region to region.
Beliefs

Mähsette Kuiuab, chief of the Cree indians
The tribes of the Cree Nation, living in the Canadian forests and US plains, venerated the spirits of the hunt. The Earth Spirit was the mother of all animals, and there was also a less-defined Sky being. Religion emphasized a close relationship with the tribes' ancestors or "old people", believed to be always near at hand. Tribal
shamans frequently entered trances to visit the land of the dead. Nature was seen as an integrated whole, so that animals spoke and told tales, and legends of the winds and of the four directions were common. Close contact with European traders and white settlers, coupled with the adoption of agriculture, greatly altered the mythology of these tribes.
Cree facts
(
Source: Canadian Geographic)
★ Cree are the largest group of
First Nations in
Canada with over 200,000 members.
★ There are 135
bands of Cree in Canada.
★ Crees cover the largest geographic area of any First Nations group in Canada.
★ The
Quebec Cree Nation calls its homeland ''Eeyou Istchee'', which means Land of the People, there are 9 communities in Eeyou Istchee.
★ The Cree language belongs to the
Algonquian branch of the
Algic linguistic stock.
★ The Cree were friendly with English and French
fur traders, which connected them to the
Hudson's Bay Company and the
North West Company.
Cree First Nations
★
Lubicon Lake Indian Nation
★
Nisichawayasihk Cree Nation
★
Opaskwayak Cree Nation
★
Enoch Cree Nation
★
Louis Bull Tribe First Nation
★
Bigstone Cree Nation
★
Beaver Lake Cree Nation
★
Little Red River Cree Nation
★
Kashechewan First Nation
★
Grand Council of the Crees of Quebec (representing nine Cree villages)
★
Norway House Cree Nation
★
Beaver Lake Cree Nation
★
Barren Lands First Nation
★
Misipawistik Cree Nation
★
Mushkego James Bay Cree
★
Fisher River Cree Nation
★
Saddle Lake Cree First Nation
★
Little Pine, Sask. First Nation
Cree Prophecy

Cree of Northern Québec (Photo: Patrick André Perron)
The so called Cree Prophecy: ''"Only after the last tree has been cut down / Only after the last river has been poisoned / Only after the last fish has been caught / Then will you find that money cannot be eaten"'' seems to be a shortened version of the
Legend of Rainbow Warriors, that is sometimes reported as a
Hopi prophecy, sometimes as a prophecy of an old Cree woman. The
complete version of this prophecy speaks about trees, rivers, and fish, but not about money:
''There was an old lady, from the "Cree" tribe, named "Eyes of Fire", who prophesied that one day, because of the white mans' or Yo-ne-gis' greed, there would come a time, when the fish would die in the streams, the birds would fall from the air, the waters would be blackened, and the trees would no longer be, mankind as we would know it would all but cease to exist. There would come a time when the "keepers of the legend, stories, culture rituals, and myths, and all the Ancient Tribal Customs" would be needed to restore us to health. They would be mankinds’ key to survival, they were the "Warriors of the Rainbow".'' (Lelanie Stone)
Instead, it speaks about an army of "Rainbow Warriors" that will appear to save the world, which is probably correlated with recent studies of
zygosity. Thus, the sense of the prophecy differs from the wide-spread shortened version.
In Germany the Cree Prophecy is often mixed up with the famous speech of
Chief Seattle in 1854. The Smith version of this speech closes with a prophecy that resembles the legend of Rainbow Warriors.
Notable Cree
★
Buffy Sainte-Marie, singer
★
Gordon Tootoosis, actor
★
Jonathan Cheechoo, ice hockey player
★
Cree Summer, singer/actress
See:
See also
★
James Bay Cree hydroelectric conflict
★
Métis
★
Michif
★
Cree language
★
Cree syllabics
External links
★
Cree cultural site
★
Grand Council of the Crees (GCC) website
★
The Plains Cree - Ethnographic, Historical and Comparative Study by David Mandelbaum
★
Lac La Ronge Band website
★
Little Red River Cree Nation website
★
Dammed river from
Canadian Geographic
★
The Concise Encyclopedia of the American Indian, Grant, Bruce, , , Wings Books, 2000, ISBN 0-517-69310-0
★
CBC Digital Archives - James Bay Project and the Cree
★
Fisher River Cree Nation Offical Website
★
The Gift of Language and Culture website