Showing posts with label elder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elder. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Trust the Spirits: A Conversation with Winston Wuttunee



This is the 3rd part of a great conversation with Elder Winston Wuttunee. He discusses spirituality and the idea of chaos which we all see in the world today. He feels that all the great teaching in major religious are connected. We are all connected. “It takes a lot of bravado to say we are different.” When First Nations smoke the pipe we must trust that what is going to happen is true.

He talks about his daughter who while living in Vancouver had little access to Elders. Winston had trust that if he prayed that help would be given to his daughter. He knows that we need trust and trust will bring great understandings.

I questioned Winston about how society has been set up not respect the roles of Elders. Winston gave the example of a house he needed to paint. He also wanted to spend time with his son and so he paid his son a small amount of money for his son come and help paint the house. The son was a young man and very busy around this time with his education and young family. His son never knew it but they spent two days having teachings and spending a great time together. Many of the old people have their hearts broken when they are thrown away. Children are also so important to the world around us.

We must always remember that sometimes people will test you, you may never know who people they are, but if you have a little knowledge they will test you to determine if you are a good person.

We also discussed his recent honouring with a 2013 Indspire award in for his lifetime work in Culture, Heritage & Spirituality. The best bit is in the second half of part 3.
 

To Learn More (podcast and Interview)

https://archive.org/details/20130516341 

https://archive.org/download/20130516341/20130516341_vbr_mp3.zip

When the Sunsets as seen with Winston Wuttunee Wpg, MB

Friday, 10 May 2013

Winston Wuttunee, A Life of Music and Spirit: The Early Years

Winston Wuttunee &
Robert-Falcon Ouellette
University of Manitoba
Cree Elder Winston Wuttunee was in the studio and completed a series of interviews about music, spirituality. Here is a discussion of his early life as a musician and the events which shaped him as a human and allowed him to grow spiritually as a human being.

Resume:
Winston initially talks about music and how young Aboriginal Cree youth traditionally would learn music in the family in his time. Winston's father was the farm instructor at the local IRS. A place that Winston refused to say the name out loud. Winston's father was born in 1892 and was well educated having earned a grade 12 education at the IRS. His family was eventually moved to Battleford when Winston was only 2. The family did not speak English at home for they only spoke Cree, but he sure did learn English quickly. His father soon started a business of a livery stable (horse repair shop). After that he created another Business selling water and delivering water from house to house for 75¢ a barrel. Whenever he would come home after work he would empty his pockets full of coins and Winston's uncles Bill and Noel would then come over and help him count the coins. The family become quite well off and eventually Winston's father would start selling and delivering ice from house to house. 

Winston and my father (James Ouelette as recorded on the birth certificate and with Indian Affairs but he always used Ouellette) would fight side by side against the other Moonyas children. They were very smart because they needed to be. They were able to run extremely quick. They would place rock piles around the streets in corners in order to defend themselves against the Moonyas (white) children. I asked if there was some racism at that time period and Winston there was just some racism Robert but a lot. Even though there was racism in the town from the RCMP and others, still members of the family were popular in school and they were able to take roles of responsibly like speaking at assemblies, music or defending fellow Neechi, brothers and sisters. “We were able to take these roles because we are Wuttunee descended from chiefs, it is in our blood.” Wuttunee means Golden Eagle Feather.

Winston also told more stories about North Battleford and the old times when he was growing up. Winston also discussed the environment and the role that Moonyas culture has taken in destroying the land that we live on and air we breathe!

Winston is a 2013 winner of an Indspire award for his work as an elder and in spirituality. This is for many the Noble prizes of the Aboriginal peoples in Canada.

To Learn More (podcast)

https://archive.org/details/WinstonWuttuneePartIMixdown  

Citations