I love the outfit. I have a grandmother (great-great-great grandma, actually) who was 1st Nation Blackfoot; however, I do not know her tribe and I only know her by the name Nancy. I got to see a picture of her from the 1940s. I also have a grandfather (technically, great-grandpa) who was 1st Nation Ojibwe from the Swan Creek tribe. His name was Albert Moore, his mother was Annamae Dagg, and her mother was Julia Fisher.
@Loki Ziehm Awesome. My uncle told me that our clan is Turtle/Bear because it was so big at one time and a mix of two clans. We also lived across the river from the Black River tribe and mingled a lot with them. My family were in the Mount Pleasant area of Michigan. From what I was told, grandma Caw bay aw no Quay (Julia Fisher) had the Mount Pleasant area passed down to her, if that is the right word, from her father Wabaness (David Fisher). The state of Michigan still owes us rent for the area from my understanding. My grandpa, Wabness, was a chief like his father, Kaw ge ke zhick (Robert Fisher), and his grandfather Checbalk. I was told that my grandpa Albert was the last chief of our tribe before our tribe, along with the Black River tribe, lost their Federal Recognition in the states. I don't know why this happened either but we should be included within the Saginaw Chippewa band from what my uncle told me. A lot of my family were enrolled in the Mount Pleasant Indian Industrial school too.
@Loki Ziehm That is sad though that they would call your wife a halfbreed. Grandpa Albert, after getting out of the Mount Pleasant Industrial Boarding school, left out on his own away from the tribe. He met and married my grandma, who was the daughter of two immigrants from Denmark, and they had my father's mother and six other children. Grandpa would try to hide the fact that he was Native. I can't be sure if he was ashamed of his heritage or not but he knew that he had to be like the white man to survive in the world when it was still legal to kill a Native. Grandpa Albert died of heart failure in 1981 and I was born in 1988 so I've only been told stories about him and seen pictures. I don't have the issues that Grandpa had since I have blonde hair, blue eyes, and a fair completion but I have some Native facial features. I guess the only thing that I ran into is that some Natives say that I am not Native because I am white. It is what it is and they can think what they think, I can't help it that Grandpa fell in love with my grandma, a white woman, and had children with her and many of those children had children with whites when they got older. Ironically, though, on my mothers side, her father looks looks a lot like his mother's grandmother, with reddish-tan skin, black hair, and brown eyes. He has heavy Native features, my mom got some of that from him too but she has the light brown hair and blue eyes from her mother who was a mix of German and English.
I was raised being told I was Black Foot Indian. Now I'm interested in knowing for sure. I'm not sure if Ancestry.com DNA test really work but I'm willing to try.
The problem is the bells. Indians didn't have bells. Hummmmmmmm I am believing all this mockery is what keeps the rain away. I've brought rain crying to YA. Otherwise since 1984 it's been damn chem trail rain. Now in 2020, and this all is going to stop. Indian pride and belief, the truth, it's not a show! It's not to be given false respect cuz you all think if you do that then the ancestors will be pleased and allow you to do and treat the people how ever you want!!?!! Insane! WTF. Ya will show you-all!!. The true Blackfoot know exactly of my words. Imagine the anguish and wait they've endured while putting all their wait, weight, on YAweh, waiting to hear of this time the sound of buffalo, the howl of the wolves! All praise and Glory to the one and only TRUE creator of heaven and earth. The wrath is beautiful. Already begun.
I am part BlackFeet & Gullah Geechee. I enjoyed watching this. I look forward to the day I am able to attend. I am honoring my ancestors on this day.
GREAT honor i am Edy Blackfoot 🕊🕊🕊Piitaa aakkii
I love the outfit. I have a grandmother (great-great-great grandma, actually) who was 1st Nation Blackfoot; however, I do not know her tribe and I only know her by the name Nancy. I got to see a picture of her from the 1940s. I also have a grandfather (technically, great-grandpa) who was 1st Nation Ojibwe from the Swan Creek tribe. His name was Albert Moore, his mother was Annamae Dagg, and her mother was Julia Fisher.
I’m looking to we maybe family never no
@Loki Ziehm Awesome.
My uncle told me that our clan is Turtle/Bear because it was so big at one time and a mix of two clans. We also lived across the river from the Black River tribe and mingled a lot with them.
My family were in the Mount Pleasant area of Michigan. From what I was told, grandma Caw bay aw no Quay (Julia Fisher) had the Mount Pleasant area passed down to her, if that is the right word, from her father Wabaness (David Fisher). The state of Michigan still owes us rent for the area from my understanding.
My grandpa, Wabness, was a chief like his father, Kaw ge ke zhick (Robert Fisher), and his grandfather Checbalk.
I was told that my grandpa Albert was the last chief of our tribe before our tribe, along with the Black River tribe, lost their Federal Recognition in the states. I don't know why this happened either but we should be included within the Saginaw Chippewa band from what my uncle told me.
A lot of my family were enrolled in the Mount Pleasant Indian Industrial school too.
@@shereeh8525 You may be right. It is a small world out there.
@Loki Ziehm That is sad though that they would call your wife a halfbreed.
Grandpa Albert, after getting out of the Mount Pleasant Industrial Boarding school, left out on his own away from the tribe. He met and married my grandma, who was the daughter of two immigrants from Denmark, and they had my father's mother and six other children.
Grandpa would try to hide the fact that he was Native. I can't be sure if he was ashamed of his heritage or not but he knew that he had to be like the white man to survive in the world when it was still legal to kill a Native. Grandpa Albert died of heart failure in 1981 and I was born in 1988 so I've only been told stories about him and seen pictures.
I don't have the issues that Grandpa had since I have blonde hair, blue eyes, and a fair completion but I have some Native facial features.
I guess the only thing that I ran into is that some Natives say that I am not Native because I am white. It is what it is and they can think what they think, I can't help it that Grandpa fell in love with my grandma, a white woman, and had children with her and many of those children had children with whites when they got older.
Ironically, though, on my mothers side, her father looks looks a lot like his mother's grandmother, with reddish-tan skin, black hair, and brown eyes. He has heavy Native features, my mom got some of that from him too but she has the light brown hair and blue eyes from her mother who was a mix of German and English.
We all one big Rainbow yo
IHÉHE MUCH VALUE ASÉ
I have some Blackfoot in me
Great moves! I have been studying your moves all night and will perform tomorrow at school so the rain goes away.
We dance for rain.
My history ‼
Slide turkry
Me Too
Iam not blackfoot but i like this type of music and dancing
I like the buffalo 🤣🤣🤣
Awe, Leahs Dad and auntie dancing so gracefully!
9:50 white bison ❤️💯🇬🇧 10:03
I’m of color they look more white interesting 🤔 I no my story😂😂😂
My people are stand strong. With are cultural 👍
They don't call us lords of the plains for nothing ;)
The blackfoot were, we were never pushed off our land. We were able to keep it. We still have it.
@Flaco Guerrero we did, we drove them out
i like blackfoot
Buffalo killed it🤣🤣🤣
Is the first song available anywhere?
😊❤
This is so amazing i love it
Amazing. I must see this in person.
Black foot Cherokee and choctaw ❤️
I am Cherokee mix Italian my uncle Tom the hawk in my cover on Facebook page in the black jacket is my uncle he is Blackfoot mix Cherokee
I have to do this for the great feast
😍😍😍
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Love
My people through my mothers dad.
I was raised being told I was Black Foot Indian. Now I'm interested in knowing for sure. I'm not sure if Ancestry.com DNA test really work but I'm willing to try.
It won't stay blackfoot but it would say native American north with key points or trace regions in southern alberta . That's what mine says.
John Whitelaw great great great grandfather we ❤️u Rest In Peace
Tkms
This is fan-see dancing
A Weird duck Am I ...In Ancestry Blackfoot Indian and Direct Pilgrims from Plymouth MA
My daughter juli is blackfoot
I’m a whitelaw we’re my people🥲
We have lack foot in the family blood, first time looking at this, I was looking at dancing g with wolfs, that why I looked it up!
Awe no womans fancy??!
Go on and let your freak flag fly!
The problem is the bells. Indians didn't have bells. Hummmmmmmm I am believing all this mockery is what keeps the rain away. I've brought rain crying to YA. Otherwise since 1984 it's been damn chem trail rain. Now in 2020, and this all is going to stop. Indian pride and belief, the truth, it's not a show! It's not to be given false respect cuz you all think if you do that then the ancestors will be pleased and allow you to do and treat the people how ever you want!!?!! Insane! WTF. Ya will show you-all!!. The true Blackfoot know exactly of my words. Imagine the anguish and wait they've endured while putting all their wait, weight, on YAweh, waiting to hear of this time the sound of buffalo, the howl of the wolves! All praise and Glory to the one and only TRUE creator of heaven and earth. The wrath is beautiful. Already begun.
🪶🪶