North Slave Métis Alliance

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North Slave Métis Alliance
File:North Slave Métis Alliance logo.png
Founded 1996
Type Non-profit
Location
Area served
Northwest Territories
Key people
William (Bill) A. Enge (current president)
Mission Unite the membership of the community of Indigenous Métis of the North Slave Region area of the Northwest Territories
Website http://www.nsma.net/

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The North Slave Métis Alliance is a non-profit society that represents the Aboriginal rights-bearing Métis people of the Northwest Territories, who primarily exercise their Aboriginal rights north and east of Great Slave Lake.[1] The NSMA’s mandate includes: The assertion, protection, and implementation of the Aboriginal rights of the North Slave Métis People; and the exercise of Métis responsibility to protect the environment and to promote and enhance Métis education, economic, social, and cultural development.[2] The NSMA is vitally concerned with the protection, preservation, and sustainable use of its traditional lands and resources. With that in mind, the NSMA is committed to principles of economic sustainability, environmental stewardship, and self-determination in respect to its traditional lands and resources.[3]

The North Slave Métis Alliance (NSMA) has been registered as a non-profit society in the Northwest Territories since 1996. The organization exists for the stated purpose of negotiating a regionally based comprehensive claim centered in the North Slave Region of the Northwest Territories. Prior to 1996, their members were represented in the 1975-1990 Dene-Métis Comprehensive Claim negotiation process by the Métis Nation of the Northwest Territories (MNNWT), which was formed in 1972 to represent all indigenous Métis in the Northwest Territories. This organisation was disbanded after the Final Agreement was rejected, and the pan-territorial process was abandoned in favor of the pursuit of regional claims. The North Slave Métis Alliance was endorsed by the MNNWT as the North Slave Métis regional land claim organisation before the MNNWT was disbanded.[4][5] The alliance represents Metis in Yellowknife, Rae-Edzo, Wha Ti, Gameti (Rae Lakes), Wekweti (Snare Lake), Dettah and Ndilo. The NSMA sponsors a number of local events, such as the annual Aboriginal Day celebration in downtown Yellowknife, which includes a parade, fish fry, and musical performances near city hall.[6]

In 2013, the NSMA won its caribou harvest lawsuit against the government of the Northwest Territories in the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories. The court found that the government of the Northwest Territories had an obligation to consult and accommodate the NSMA and failed in its obligation as a Crown actor. The court recognized that the members of the NSMA hold Aboriginal rights over their traditional lands.[7]

Leadership

NSMA presidents serve a four-year term.[8] The successive presidents of the NSMA have been:[9]

President From To
William (Bill) A. Enge November 2004 Present
Robert "Sholto" Douglas April 2003 November 2003
Bob Turner December 2002 2003
Clem Paul 1996 2002

History of the North Slave Métis People

File:N-1979-073-0663.jpg
Sousi Beaulieu wearing a traditional Métis sash.

The North Slave Métis have continuously used and occupied the territory north and east of Great Slave Lake since the mid-18th century.[10][11][12] By the early-19th century, the North Slave Métis community in the Great Slave Lake area was distinct from other indigenous groups.[13] Outsiders easily identified them, largely because of their occupation and employment patterns.[14] They were "prized as fur-trade employees for their language ability, skills in living on the land, and influence in the Indian populations".[15] North Slave Métis people tended to be highly mobile and have a regional consciousness.[16][17] Communities were characterized by a regional network within which there would be certain fixed settlements, connected by transportation systems of river routes, cart trails, and portages along which people settled. Their traditional territory followed hunting, trapping, and trading trails north to the Great Bear Lake and east into what is now Nunavut.[18] Historic North Slave Métis settlements, such as Old Fort Rae, Lac La Martre, Yellowknife River, Old Fort Providence, Fort Resolution, Beaulieu Fort (now known as Lutselk'e), and Fort Reliance, existed before European powers established effective political and legal control over the geographic area.[19][20][21]

Notable North Slave Métis

  • François Beaulieu II (1771 - † Nov 1872)- Beaulieu II was one of the "founding fathers" of the Great Slave Lake area Métis. The Beaulieu family was already established in the region when the European fur trade first arrived and took up residency in the area.[22] Beaulieu and his family inhabited many regions of the north, demonstrating the regional nature of the Métis.[23][24][25][26][27][28]

References

  1. The Standing Senate Committee On Aboriginal Peoples Evidence, Parliament of Canada (Ottawa, Wednesday, October 17, 2012)
  2. The Standing Senate Committee On Aboriginal Peoples Evidence, Parliament of Canada (Ottawa, Wednesday, October 17, 2012)
  3. Public Hearing Transcript February 19, 2013 - Yellowknife, NECHALACHO RARE EARTH ELEMENT PROJECT - EA1011-001 [2010]
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  7. Enge v. Mandeville et al, 2013 NWTSC 33 < http://devlingailus.com/pdfs/Enge_v_Mandeville_Case_Brief.pdf >
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  9. Alliance in turmoil (Northern News Services, 2003)
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  12. Mackenzie, Alexander. Voyages from Montreal Through the Continent of North America to the Frozen and Pacific Oceans in 1789 and 1793 Vol. I (1902 ed.)
  13. Jones, G. 2005. Historical Profile of the Great Slave Lake Area’s Mixed European-Indian Ancestry Community. Unpublished manuscript, Department of Justice Canada and Office of the Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non- Status Indians.
  14. Jones, G. 2005. Historical Profile of the Great Slave Lake Area’s Mixed European-Indian Ancestry Community. Unpublished manuscript, Department of Justice Canada and Office of the Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non- Status Indians.
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  16. Jones, G. 2005. Historical Profile of the Great Slave Lake Area’s Mixed European-Indian Ancestry Community. Unpublished manuscript, Department of Justice Canada and Office of the Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non- Status Indians.
  17. Slobodin, Richard. Metis of the MacKenzie District. Canadian Research centre for Anthropology 1966.
  18. Jones, G. 2005. Historical Profile of the Great Slave Lake Area’s Mixed European-Indian Ancestry Community. Unpublished manuscript, Department of Justice Canada and Office of the Federal Interlocutor for Métis and Non- Status Indians.
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  23. HBC Archives. (B.239/k/2&3)
  24. HBC Archives. (D.38/6b)
  25. Pike, Warburton (1892). The barren ground of northern Canada. [Cover title: Journeys to the barren ground of northern Canada, 1889-1891; in search of musk-ox]
  26. Jones, Charles Jesse & Inman, Henry. (1899). Buffalo Jones’ forty years of adventure; a volume of facts gathered from experience. Topeka, Kans., Crane & co
  27. Guy Blanchet, “Exploring with Sousi [Beaulieu] and Black Basile,”Beaver, Autumn 1964, Vol. 44, No.2, Out. 295,
  28. Seton, E. T. (1911). The Arctic prairies: a canoe-journey of 2,000 miles in search of the caribou; being the account of a voyage to the region north of Aylmer Lake. C. Scribner's sons.

North Slave Métis Alliance Research

Further reading with reference to North Slave Métis

Archived News