Story About Harvesting Wild Rice on Michigan Public Radio

Podcast here , slide show here

Summary:

For thousands of years, Native American tribes in the Great Lakes region have been harvesting wild rice. They call it manoomin.

But over the past few centuries, this tradition has been dying out. The rice beds have been shrinking, and the cultural knowledge has been disappearing. Many tribes were forced to relocate away from the wild rice beds. Starting in the 1870s, some children were taken from their families, into boarding schools. They were given English names and cut off from their culture and from the knowledge of how to harvest rice.

In Michigan, some people are trying to bring the tradition back.

Disaster Response Drill at Lac Vieux Desert Band

State and tribal cooperation in Michigan at its best….

From TV (video):

WATERSMEET — “We need to be aware of what’s going on.  I don’t know, it seems like a lot of people with upper respiratory stuff happening here.”

As Dr. Gary Pusateri addressed his staff at the Lac Vieux Desert Health Clinic Wednesday, his words implied trouble for the small town.  From the waiting room came the sounds of dry coughing and the moans of patients in pain.  It would have been an alarming situation for any small clinic–especially if it were real.

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Lac Vieux Desert Band Cuts Deal with Muskegon

From Indianz:

The city council in Muskegon, Michigan, voted 5-2 to approve an agreement with the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa for an off-reservation casino.

The deal requires the tribe to pay $2 million a year for municipal services plus 4 percent of net gaming revenues and other service fees. The total annual payment is estimated at $4.5 million. The agreement is non-binding and non-exclusionary. The Little River Band of Ottawa Indians is also proposing an off-reservation casino in the city.

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Lac Vieux Desert Off-Reservation Gaming Proposal (Muskegon) — News Coverage

More coverage from the Kalamazoo Gazette and the Muskegon Chronicle. The Chronicle’s coverage denotes significant skepticism:

Obstacles piled high as tribes consider casino

The standing-room-only crowd at the casino presentation by the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians left Muskegon City Hall on Monday night wondering whether the western Upper Peninsula tribe’s proposal was realistic.

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Lac Vieux Desert Off-Reservation Gaming Proposal (Muskegon)

From Indianz:

Lac Vieux Band seeks off-reservation casino

The Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians is seeking an off-reservation casino in Muskegon, Michigan.

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More “Nimrod Nation” — LA Times

From the L.A. Times:


Aaron Peterson / AP

“Nimrod Nation,” which airs Nov. 26, tracks a season in the life of the Watersmeet Nimrods, a small-town basketball team in far-northern Michigan

TELEVISION REVIEW

The Nimrod Chronicles

“Nimrod Nation,” which airs Nov. 26, tracks a season in the life of the Watersmeet Nimrods, a small-town basketball team in far-northern Michigan

Community — and small-town basketball — are the focus of a new reality series on the Sundance Channel.

By Robert Lloyd, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 26, 2007

Since the current writers strike was first bruited, the prospect of more reality TV has been held out to the public like a threat — coal in the stocking at Christmas, the boogeyman waiting in the closet. People watch a lot of reality TV as it is, but I suspect that even among its most ardent fans there are many who sense there is something not quite right about it, something not . . . real. It’s good for sensation and sentiment but not for anything resembling the dispassionately considered truth. Continue reading

“Nimrod Nation” on Sundance Channel

From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:

 

Tuned In: Not-so-simple life in ‘Nimrod Nation’

Sunday, November 25, 2007

 

At first, the new Sundance Channel documentary series “Nimrod Nation” (9 and 9:30 p.m. Monday) appears to be a light-hearted look at “how the other half lives,” the other half being the denizens of tiny Watersmeet, Mich. They sound like Canadians, eh, and the snow-covered frozen lakes look like the same tableau as in “Fargo.”

But any cuteness is erased by somewhat graphic scenes of a deer being skinned and a pig being shot in the head. Neither is gratuitous ; it’s just how these people live.

“I have a gun in my car, who doesn’t?” says one fresh-faced teenager. “It’s just the way we are. We love huntin’.” Continue reading