Greetings to all Native Sons & Daughters Membership!!
Here is the new National Drum Beats Newsletter, the Winter-Spring edition for the 2020-21 program year. We hope you enjoy it and that it provides some inspiration for you the member, your Tribes, or your Longhouses. Please take the time to read the stories and features.
As always, we encourage any Longhouse, Tribe or members to submit articles, stories, and spirit in the newsletter.
Greetings to all Native Sons & Daughters Membership!!
Here is the new National Drum Beats Newsletter, the Fall edition for the 2020-21 program year. We hope you enjoy it and that it provides some inspiration for you the member, your Tribes, or your Longhouses. Please take the time to read the stories and features.
As always, we encourage any Longhouse, Tribe or members to submit articles, stories, and spirit in the newsletter.
Greetings to all Native Sons & Daughters Membership!!
Here is the new National Drum Beats Newsletter, the Summer 2020 edition for the 2019-20 program year. We hope you enjoy it and that it provides some inspiration for you the member, your Tribes, or your Longhouses. Please take the time to read the stories and features.
As always, we encourage any Longhouse, Tribe or members to submit articles, stories, and spirit in the newsletter.
Submitted by Dave “Buckeye” Garberson and Greg Measor, NLL Elders Original Article June 2014
This is an updated article about June Friday MacInnis. Until
2017, June was the oldest living niece of the great Joe Friday, Ojibway Indian
whose inspiration gave the program a Native American theme about 90 years ago.
Joe Friday was her uncle as her father Willie, was one of Joes brothers. Sadly,
National Longhouse learned that June passed away in August 2017 at the age of
86. She was very important in the legacy of Native Sons & Daughters
Programs and was very proud of her family’s part in the NSD legacy.
June was born at Fridays Point on Bear Island on June 11,
1931. Bear Island is the Ojibway Indian
tribal land preserve on Lake Temagami, Temagami, Ontario, which for reference
is about 5 hours north of Toronto, Ontario Canada. She weighed under 4 pounds and
needed special care by the tribal birth women (called midwives today) as the
doctor thought she would not survive.
She and her mother got special treatments at home for several months
until they both started to get better and (as they say) the rest is history.
Her Ojibway name was Abamageis, which means
Strawberry Month which the month of June is considered. She is a part of the White Bear Clan
recalling the old story of Chief White Bear taking into his family those women
and children when their father died.
White Bear did this many times for other families over the years as do
the Ojibway traditionally even now.
Her education until age 9 came from her family, primarily
her brothers and sisters who would read to her. Her ability to read was
important when she finally started school in the Christian grade school then
completing high school.
She married in 1947 after her then to be husband got back
from WWII. June has 3 boys and a
daughter (who passed in 2005). As of this writing, she has 6 grandchildren and
6 great grandchildren.
For many years she taught the Ojibway language, traditions
and history to interested children and young people as those ways and words
have gone to pass with younger generations.
She most recently lived in Northbay (an hour below Temagami) for a
number of years at a senior center where she had been very active.
In later years, she would read and knit,
knitting all kinds of clothes and things that she mostly gave away for gifts to
community centers and friends. She also wrote a series of stories about her
family and history and in 2016 realized her dream to see those stories in print
when Friday Memories – (The Life and Times of June Friday MacInnis) was first
published.
Greetings to all Native Sons & Daughters Membership!!
Here is the new National Drum Beats Newsletter, the Spring 2020 edition for the 2019-20 program year. We hope you enjoy it and that it provides some inspiration for you the member, your Tribes, or your Longhouses. Please take the time to read the stories and features.
As always, we encourage any Longhouse, Tribe or members to submit articles, stories, and spirit in the newsletter.
Greetings to all Native Sons & Daughters Membership!!
Here is the new National Drum Beats Newsletter, the Fall 2019 edition for the 2018-19 program year. We hope you enjoy it and that it provides some inspiration for you the member, your Tribes, or your Longhouses. Please take the time to read the stories and features.
As always, we encourage any Longhouse, Tribe or members to submit articles, stories, and spirit in the newsletter.