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Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute

Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute

Many indigenous cultures, histories, and languages, even in Canada, have disappeared as the Elders have passed on. Aanischaaukamikw flows from the knowledge that Cree culture must be captured, maintained, shared, celebrated, and practiced. Cree Elders have spoken of the need for a central place for the protection of “the ways”, and have developed a vision for Aanischaaukamikw over several decades.

Aanischaaukamikw is the realization of that vision. It is the Crees’ primary location for preservation of documents, media, and physical objects, designed for preservation, conservation, and knowledge transfer.

More than anything, it is a living, breathing symbol of the James Bay Crees’ determination to preserve and share the stories and legends, the music, the pictures, and the physical objects that show this First Nations people’s unique interaction with the land, expressed through hunting, fishing, trapping, and underscored with a reverence for the land they have walked for 7000 years.

Photo Credit: http://domusweb.it//content/dam/domusweb/en/architecture/2014/07/17/aanischaaukamikw_cree_cultural_institute/08-cree-cultural-institute.jpg

Text Credit: http://www.creeculturalinstitute.ca/en/about/mission-and-vision/

Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute

Aanischaaukamikw Cree Cultural Institute

Challenges
Site Info
Discovery Quest

The Institute opened its doors for the first time in:

2011 2010 2009

Many indigenous cultures, histories, and languages, even in Canada, have disappeared as the Elders have passed on. Aanischaaukamikw flows from the knowledge that Cree culture must be captured, maintained, shared, celebrated, and practiced. Cree Elders have spoken of the need for a central place for the protection of “the ways”, and have developed a vision for Aanischaaukamikw over several decades.

Aanischaaukamikw is the realization of that vision. It is the Crees’ primary location for preservation of documents, media, and physical objects, designed for preservation, conservation, and knowledge transfer.

More than anything, it is a living, breathing symbol of the James Bay Crees’ determination to preserve and share the stories and legends, the music, the pictures, and the physical objects that show this First Nations people’s unique interaction with the land, expressed through hunting, fishing, trapping, and underscored with a reverence for the land they have walked for 7000 years.

Oujé-Bougoumou, , Quebec
(418) 745-2444
http://www.creeculturalinstitute.ca/
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Photo: http://domusweb.it//content/dam/domusweb/en/architecture/2014/07/17/aanischaaukamikw_cree_cultural_institute/08-cree-cultural-institute.jpg