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The Cree language (also known in the most broad classification as Cree-Montagnais, Cree-Montagnais-Naskapi, to show the groups included within it) is the name for a group of closely related Algonquian languages, [3] the mother tongue (i.e. language first learned and still understood) of approximately 96,000 people, and the language most often ...
Levi, Sister M. Carolissa, CHIPPEWA INDIANS of Yesterday and Today(1956). [1] , an article in the Washington Post Verne Dusenberry, "Waiting for a Day That Never Comes" , Little Shell Tribe History, Little Shell Tribe Newsletter , hosted by Robert Dean Rudeseals The Little Shell Tribe of Montana Archived 2011-01-10 at the Wayback Machine
Cheryl McKenzie is a Canadian broadcast journalist and the Director of News and Current Affairs for the APTN National News. [1] She is of Anishinabek and Cree descent. She is best known as the host of the Aboriginal People's Television Network's half-hour nightly news show APTN National News, and the talk Show InFocus.
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The Chippewa Cree Tribe (Officially in Cree: ᐅᒋᐻᐤ ᓀᐃᔭᐤ, romanized: ocipwêw nêiyaw) [3] is a Native American tribe on the Rocky Boy's Reservation in Montana who are descendants of Cree who migrated south from Canada and Chippewa (Ojibwe) who moved west from the Turtle Mountains in North Dakota in the late 19th century.
Abishabis (died 1843) was a Cree religious leader and prophet of a movement that spread during the 1840s among the Cree communities in what is now northern Manitoba and Ontario. His preaching, an admixture of Christianity and Cree beliefs, caused some Cree people to stop hunting furs, angering the Hudson's Bay Company and reducing its profits.
For people whose Cree ancestry has been independently verified, see Category:American people of Cree descent. For citizens of a Cree tribe, see Category:Cree people and its subcategories. See also: Native American identity in the United States
The Oji-Cree people are descended from historical intermarriage between the Ojibwa and Cree cultures, but constitute a distinct nation. [2] [3] They are considered one of the component groups of Anishinaabe, and reside primarily in a transitional zone between traditional Ojibwa lands to their south and traditional Cree lands to their north ...