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Gathering Giizhik in a changing landscape

Giizhik (gee-zhick; Northern white cedar; Thuja occidentalis) maintains essential roles in Anishinaabe teachings, ceremony, and lifeways. Anishinaabeg at Bahweting and Gnoozhekaaning have adaptively gathered Giizhik through millennia of change. Over the last century, Giizhik have declined in abundan...

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Published in:Ecology and society 2022-12, Vol.27 (4), p.29, Article art29
Main Authors: Clark, Robin Michigiizhigookwe, Reo, Nicholas, Hudson-Niigaanwewiidan, Joshua, Waawaashkeshikwe Collins-Downwind, Laura, (Colleen Medicine), Waabshkaa Asinekwe
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container_issue 4
container_start_page 29
container_title Ecology and society
container_volume 27
creator Clark, Robin Michigiizhigookwe
Reo, Nicholas
Hudson-Niigaanwewiidan, Joshua
Waawaashkeshikwe Collins-Downwind, Laura
(Colleen Medicine), Waabshkaa Asinekwe
description Giizhik (gee-zhick; Northern white cedar; Thuja occidentalis) maintains essential roles in Anishinaabe teachings, ceremony, and lifeways. Anishinaabeg at Bahweting and Gnoozhekaaning have adaptively gathered Giizhik through millennia of change. Over the last century, Giizhik have declined in abundance across their range and future declines are projected due to climate-driven change. Anishinaabe gatherers maintain relationships with Giizhik forests across a gradient of Giizhik dominance; with these relationships and knowledges, gatherers offer important alternatives in forest management planning and practice. The Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians at Bahweting, Bay Mills Indian Community at Gnoozhekaaning, and Giizhik gatherers from each community are pursuing forest relations based on Anishinaabe lifeways and relationalities. We describe gathering practices and changes through time based on group discussions and semi-structured interviews with 25 Anishinaabe gatherers and tribal natural resource staff. Spiritual and physical relationships among Anishinaabeg and Giizhik were discussed within the contexts of our original instructions (guidance defining respectful kin relations in this moral universe, handed down through the generations since time immemorial), settler colonialism, and forest management. This work builds upon the concepts of relationalities and collective continuance in the context of Anishinaabe forest relationships. We offer suggestions on ways of respecting and protecting forest communities by putting forest management into the context of forest relationalities.
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ispartof Ecology and society, 2022-12, Vol.27 (4), p.29, Article art29
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subjects Accountability
anishinaabe
Centuries
Changes
Climate change
Colonialism
Community relations
Context
Forest communities
Forest management
Forest protection
Forestry
Forests
Genocide
indigenous knowledges
Lakes
Management
Management planning
Natural resources
relationality
Responsibilities
Thuja occidentalis
Trees
title Gathering Giizhik in a changing landscape
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