The Leech Lake Ojibwa’s Wild Rice Culture
Andrew Brown
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History of the Leech Lake Band
Manoomin ~ Wild Rice
Manoominikewin ~ Making Rice
Neegoniwabungigaywin ~ The Future
Works Cited
History of the Ojibwa People
Ojibwa people belong to the Midewiwin society or Grand Medicine
Society of the aboriginal groups of the Maritimes, New England, and
Great Lakes regions in North America. Tribal groups who have such
societies passed along birch bark scrolls with ceremonies and
teachings. They are often associated with the Seven Fires Society,
and other aboriginal groups or organizations. The Ojibwa are also
known as Anishinaabeg which means “original man” or “the people”.
The Ojibwa are the largest Native American tribe on the continent
north of Mexico. They are descendants of the Algonquian language
family to the east. Their history tells of a prophecy to move west
following the Great Lakes until they reached the land where food
grew on the water. The food it spoke of was wild rice, and it
resulted in the development of one of the largest tribes in North
America. They settled the regions of Wisconsin and Southern Ontario
first, and then began to move west into Minnesota taking control of
Dakota Sioux lands (Warren).
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History of the Leech Lake Band
The Leech Lake Reservation was not always in the possession of
the Ojibwa people. In the 1600’s this land was occupied by the
Dakota people. Historically, the Mississippi headwaters had always
been an attractive area to indigenous tribes due to its abundance of
natural resources. The Ojibwa people moved into this region as a
result of the Beaver Wars with tribes belonging to the Iroquois
Confederacy. These wars began with an attempt by the Iroquois to
monopolize the fur trade and control European trade with western
Great Lakes tribes. The Ojibwa were one of these tribes. However,
even prior to this point there was competition for the hunting
grounds. Prior to the Beaver Wars, there was another tribe called
the Fox who dominated most of Wisconsin. There were three major
competitors for the hunting grounds south and west of Lake Superior;
the Ojibwa, Dakota Sioux, and the Fox (Sultzman).
The Fox were enemies of the Iroquois Confederacy, but they also
were at war with the French. This conflict was over a number of key
waterways and portages that linked Wisconsin to the Mississippi
waterway. French forces clashed several times with the Fox in the
early 1700’s, greatly reducing Fox population. Originally, the Fox
were estimated to number 10,000 strong, but between the years of
1700-1737 their numbers dropped to about 500. By 1737 the French had
won the war against the Fox, but an even larger enemy was about to
surface, the Dakota Sioux (Sultzman).
The Dakota Sioux occupied the Eastern Dakotas and Minnesota until
the 1700’s and subsisted as a woodland culture, thriving on hunting,
fishing, and farming. Hostilities between Ojibwa and Sioux existed
long before the European fur trade, but these disputes were normal
territorial issues and rarely serious. The hunting lands in Northern
Minnesota were peacefully shared before the fur trade. By the mid
1700’s the Ojibwa had used up most of the beaver on their own lands
supplying the French. This forced them to rely more on shared
hunting territory and to look with desire on the fur and rice lakes
the Dakota had in Minnesota (Sultzman).
The Dakota became increasingly disturbed by the heavy Ojibwa
hunting, but trouble came in 1736 when the French sold firearms to
Sioux enemies: the Cree and Assiniboine. The Dakota would not
tolerate the French arming their enemies and attacked Fort St.
Charles killing 21 Frenchmen. Protecting their interests as French
allies, the Ojibwa swore revenge and formed an alliance with the
Cree and Assiniboine. Armed with French weapons, better canoes, and
a healthy supply of warriors, the Ojibwa began a campaign to drive
the Sioux out of Minnesota. These battles stretched from the
Minnesota River North to the Red River Valley (Sultzman). These two
tribes had become sworn enemies of each other and the Ojibwa were
commonly referred to the Dakota as Na-dou-esse meaning, “snake in
the grass”. This name was pronounced “Nadouesioux” by the French and
later shortened to just “Sioux” (Danziger).
The first attacks on the Mississippi headwaters came from an
Ojibwa chieftain of the Lake Superior bands by the name of
Bi-aus-wah. This occurred at the Sioux village on Sandy Lake. Sandy
Lake and its many bays contained a flourishing wild rice crop and
the region surrounding the lake was home to a bountiful population
of wild game. In addition, its waters were easily accessed via the
Savannah Portage, which linked the Mississippi watershed to the
Great Lakes watershed. These abundant resources could help sustain a
large settlement and were very enticing to Bi-aus-wah and his
people. He sent his war-club, tobacco, and wampum belt of war to the
scattered bands of his tribe to recruit warriors to march with him
against the Sioux villages at Sandy Lake. Wampum belts presented or
received at councils, often recorded significant events in history.
Woven belts were records of important events, ideas, contracts,
pledges, treaties or compacts between political entities (Warren).
Armed with firearms obtained from French traders, Bi-aus-wah and
his warriors had a decided advantage over the Dakotas. After
repeated attacks sustained by reinforcements, the Dakotas were
driven off battered and discouraged. Bi-aus-wah had finally gained
control of Sandy Lake for his people. This was the first Ojibwa
village on the Mississippi headwaters (Warren).
From Sandy Lake many more Ojibwa war parties plunged farther into
the headwaters region, and bloody conflict persisted over the land
and resources. At the same time conflict between the Sioux and
Ojibwa had erupted over much of Minnesota and Southern Ontario. Some
years after the Ojibwa took Sandy Lake, the Sioux gathered warriors
together in an effort to drive the Ojibwa out of the headwaters
country, but this attempt was in vain. The Ojibwa were able to drive
back the Dakota counter-attacks and maintain a firm grip on the
landscape. By 1780 there was not a single Sioux village north of the
Minnesota River. Discouraged by the loss of many hunters and
warriors the Sioux withdrew to the south and west, continuing for
years to lead small war parties against the Ojibwa as revenge for
the blood shed by their warriors. Soon after the Dakota counter
attack, Ojibwa settlements from the Bear and Catfish clans were
established on the islands of Leech Lake, Cass Lake and Lake
Winnibigoshish (all within the present day boundaries of the Leech
Lake Reservation). William Warren gives a second-hand account of
what it was like to live in the days and months following Ojibwa
settlement of Leech Lake.
In those days, the hunter moved through the dense
forests in fear and trembling. He paddled his light canoe over
the calm bosom of a lake or down the rapid current of a river,
in search of game to clothe and feed his children, expecting
each moment that from behind a tree, an embankment of sand along
the lakeshore, or a clump of bushes on the river bank, would
speed the bullet or arrow which would lay him low in death.
(Warren)
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Manoomin ~ Wild Rice
The Ojibway word for wild rice is “manoomin” which has several
accepted meanings including “good berry” and “good seed.” Wild Rice
is not actually a member of the rice family. It is a member of the
Gramineae family which is technically classified as grasses. This
family of plants includes many species that serve as staple food
plants throughout the world. There are three species of wild rice in
North America; Northern Wild Rice (Zizania palustris), Wild Rice
(Zizania aquatica), and Texas Wild Rice (Zizania texana). Texas Wild
Rice is a rare variety of Zizania that grows in an isolated area in
the San Marcos River of Texas. Both Z. palustris and Z. aquatica
grow in Minnesota, but Z. palustris is native to Northern Minnesota
and the Leech Lake Reservation. Leech Lake Reservation is home to
over 40 wild rice lakes, making it the largest wild rice producing
reservation in the state. The plant thrives in the rich alluvial
deposits commonly found in the lakes and rivers on the reservation.
It needs this bottom structure for anchorage of the plant and for
nutrients.
Wild rice is an annual plant, therefore, it requires reseeding
each year. Because of this, Ojibwa usually left a percentage of
their harvest to ensure seed for future crops. The kernels of wild
rice lack natural buoyancy, thus when the seed hits the water it
sinks, heavy end down. Once the seed reaches the bottom it settles
into the muddy bottom and lays dormant until it has an opportunity
to germinate. Since wild rice sinks rapidly and tends to grow in
areas devoid of fast flowing currents, enlargement of a rice bed is
slow and gradual. Wild rice thrives in waterways where the water is
fresh and slow moving. The seed is adapted to sink into the mud and
stick, while competing plants with more buoyant seeds are whisked
away with the current. Wild rice also has a very hard seed coat and
it maintains the ability to remain dormant for several years. Only
about 50% of the seeds that fall each year actually germinate the
following year, but since seasonal fall and spring flooding stir the
bottom, seeds that didn’t germinate from several years in succession
can be exposed and given a chance to germinate along with the
previous years seeds (Veenum Jr.).
Germination of wild rice begins with spring runoff from mid to
late April. Once water warms to about forty-five degrees Fahrenheit
the seeds sprout and establish straight, white roots. The plant then
develops long thin leaves underwater. Near the end of May the plant
relies completely on photosynthesis for food. By the end of June
leaves have begun to sprawl on the surface forming a floating stage
of thick green mats. One to two weeks later the plant begins to form
aerial leaves as the stalk emerges from the water. By August, each
stalk forms a pyramid shaped panicle at its apex. This stage is the
formation of the head that bears the rice. In Minnesota the ripening
period begins around August 18 and lasts until about September 12,
with most rice maturing by September 5. The Leech Lake Ojibway
termed this period of time Mah-no-min-i-kay Gii-siss, The Ricing
Moon (Veenum Jr.).
Traditional Ojibwa have an intimate knowledge of sun and moon
phases. They believe that both held answers to seasons, weather, and
the fate of many medicines they gathered for subsistence. Paul
Buffalo provided an excellent description of this in Dr. Timothy
Roufs ethno biography of him. Buffalo is a Leech Laker who described
the system used by his people.
We start wild ricing when the moon is in the
quarter. When it's a full moon the rice is too green. The rice
is too green when the moon is full. We know a certain percentage
of rice is green when the moon is full. Everything is matured
through the sun and the hot weather. And if there's a big area
that's ripening and the stage of water and the stage of the heat
from the sun are normal, we'll know when the rice is ready by
the stage of the moon. We go by the time of the moon. We watch
the seasoning of the rice by the moon, yah, we go by the moon.
It's the same as a clock. Ya. (Buffalo)
The Ojibwa took great care with their wild rice fields. They
always ensured the rice was ripe before harvest and they always were
sure to give thanks to Manitou, their word for God. “We migwItch
mahnomen,
the wild rice, migwItch maple sugar, migwItch the
berries and garden,
migwItch the seasons. MigwItch every season that you
have. You should
migwItch every season. That's what it is for, to migwItch
Manitou,” said Buffalo. Along with this customary thank you, the
Ojibwa also commonly leave behind an offering of tobacco or another
item symbolizing their gratefulness for the bountiful resources
provided them by Manitou. They did this because they knew that a
good harvest was not guaranteed. All that it would take for a crop
failure would be a significant water rise during the grass stage or
a torrential hail/wind storm to pulverize the stocks. In the event
of such a disaster, entire bands of Ojibwa may be forced to relocate
in search of alternate food sources. The years from 1847-1853 were
notoriously bad years for rice crops and earned the nickname “the
starvation years.” During this period the Pillager band at Leech
Lake of more than one thousand members moved west to hunt buffalo.
The Pillager band was comprised of the original Mississippi Ojibwa
and was settled on the Cass Lake, Lake Winnibigoshish, and Leech
Lake Reservations (all three are contained within Leech Lake
Reservation today). Data collected on several Minnesota lakes over
the years showed that in years that water levels from May 15 to July
1 were six inches above normal there was a fifty percent rice crop
failure, and in years with twelve inches or more above normal water
levels during this time period, a near total failure was experienced
(Vennum Jr.).
Wild Rice is also a staple for many wildlife species including
insects, and an increase in these creatures also could significantly
reduce the annual harvest. Probably the most common pest in the rice
fields was the rice worm (Apamea apamiformis). They are small
worms only about one-quarter inch in length, yet they can ruin
stands of rice near shore and inflict a bite that can be quite
bothersome to rice harvesters. Research done in Minnesota revealed
that one larva per plant can reduce a wild rice crop by 10% (Oelke).
Waterfowl also depend greatly upon the rice crops across the region.
Because the rice fields were so attractive to waterfowl, the Ojibwa
men often used them as a decoy to attract them into nets as well as
concealment to ambush the birds with arrows or clubs. This was
easily done because the birds were often sluggish in flight after
feasting on the rice. Many other birds besides waterfowl also fed
heavily on the ripening stands of wild rice; the red-winged
blackbird was a common rice pilferer. The Ojibwa did not take the
onslaught of winged bandits lightly. One account tells of an Ojibwa
man named Henry Baker who was lame and unable to actively
participate in the rice harvest. He erected a scarecrow in the rice
fields and attached a cowbell to the top which he rang with a string
attached to shore every time the birds would land and begin to feed
(Veenum Jr.). Fluctuating water levels, intense storms, insects,
disease, birds and mammals like the muskrat all threatened the
annual rice harvest. This is why the Ojibwa always gave thanks to
the Manitou.
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Manoominikewin ~ Making Rice
Eva Lips, an Ojibwa anthropologist described the rice harvest
from the traditional Ojibwa perspective: “The rice harvest of the
Ojibwa is not just an event with temporal boundaries of weeks—namely
the weeks of the ripening of the harvest fruit and its processing
and storage; it is the decisive event of the year, of the total
economic life and with it, life itself” (Veenum Jr.). When the rice
was finally ready to harvest, the Ojibwa would come together and
form ricing camps. This was as much a social gathering as it was
food production. Whole families traveled together and rejoined old
friends at camp. There was much laughter and joy throughout the
camps. There were many games and competitions for young folks to
engage in such as lacrosse and canoe races. This was also an
important time for courtship between young Ojibwa men and women
(Veenum Jr.).
When it came time to harvest, the Ojibwa traditionally wore clean
clothing and their canoes were always kept clean. They were careful
to make sure that cleanliness was kept when gathering any sort of
food. Rice chiefs were also appointed to monitor the rice prior to
forming camps. The rice chief was the one who decided when the rice
could be harvested (Buffalo).
The Ojibwa had two major methods of harvesting wild rice; tying
rice and knocking rice. Those who were older or unable to find a
ricing partner might have participated in an activity called tying
rice. When Ojibwa tied rice they used strips of basswood twine and
tied together bundles of rice heads. Rice bundled in this fashion
usually ripened better and wasn’t lost to wind or birds as much.
Though tedious, tying rice was a productive way for those who
couldn’t rice with flails to harvest a good amount of rice (Veenum
Jr.). When the tied bundles were ripe the rice bundle could simply
be untied and shaken into the boat. Those who were young and able
formed ricing partners and used a technique called knocking. When
knocking rice one person is designated the poler and is charged with
piloting the boat through the rice fields while the knocker sits and
harvests.
There are three basic tools required to harvest using this
technique; the canoe, the flails, and something to push the boat.
The canoe was skillfully crafted of birch bark and pointed at each
end. This type of canoe was usually anywhere from twelve to eighteen
feet in length and ten to eighteen inches deep. Birch bark made the
canoes light which allowed them to travel through the rice fields
with ease on the poler and the rice. Often, for the purpose of
cleanliness, Ojibwa would have a special canoe that they only used
for ricing. To propel the canoes Ojibwa used either a long paddle
with a small notch in the end to catch the bottom or a long pole
with a wooden fork on the end. Some believed that the paddles were
easier on the roots of the rice and that using forked poles were bad
for the rice. (Buffalo) The pole was typically constructed of either
small diameter balsam or spruce for its supple properties. Attached
to the end of the pole was a carved or natural fork usually crafted
from hardwood such as ash, maple, or hickory. The pole itself
usually doubled as a clothesline at other times of the year (Veenum
Jr.). Finally, the flails were also a very important tool and
considerable detail was implemented in their construction. Flails
were designed to be about two feet to about three and a half feet in
length and about one and a quarter inch in diameter at the butt
ends, gradually tapering to a blunt point. The flails had to be
light weight so as not to tire the ricer too quickly. For this
reason cedar was a popular wood chosen for the flail. Considerable
craftsmanship was required to fashion ricing flails and they were
usually carved to fit the hand of the person who owned them (Veenum
Jr.).
Ojibwa only harvested rice when it was ripe so as to not damage
the rice. When they found a patch of ripe rice the poler would guide
the canoe back and forth across the rice field in a parallel
fashion. As the canoe was moving through the rice the flailer would
alternate sides of the canoe, gently pulling as much rice as
possible over the edge of the canoe and gently flailing down and
away to send the rice into the bottom of the canoe. Most ricers
adopted a sort of ricing tempo that consisted of three beats (Reach
and pull over, thresh, thresh, Reach and pull over, thresh, thresh).
When wild rice is ripe it requires only gentle brushing of the
flails to dislodge the rice into the canoe; however, attempting to
harvest rice when it is not ripe or flailing too hard can damage the
rice and threaten later harvest that year. Once the canoe was full,
the ricers had seventy-five to one hundred pounds of rice and they
then took it back to shore and unloaded. A good day of ricing is
considered to be about two hundred pounds. Some Canadian estimates
have been as high as seven hundred pounds. I grew up on the Big
Sandy River which flows into Big Sandy Lake and during the late
summer wild rice dominates its channel. My father recalls his uncle
Jerry Brown and brother-in-law Robert Moe once harvested eight
hundred pounds in one day of ricing on the river (Brown). I’ve never
harvested over two hundred pounds in one day. That must’ve been a
long day!
Once the rice was harvested it was placed onto large birch bark
mats to dry. The rice was periodically stirred on these mats to
hasten the drying process. During this process, pieces of chaff,
stalks, and leaves were removed. Once the drying process was
finished the rice was ready to be parched or smoke cured. Ojibwa
used two methods of curing wild rice; fire drying or smoke drying
rice on scaffolds above a fire and parching wild rice in a metal
kettle. The latter was adopted with the arrival of metal with the
European fur trade. Smoke drying employed the same scaffolds used
for curing meat, fish, and berries. Fire dried wild rice was less
labor intensive because it didn’t need constant turning like
parching. It also kept indefinitely and unlike parched rice could be
used as seed because the fire drying wouldn’t destroy the germ. The
only downside to fire dried wild rice is it took longer to cook
(Veenum Jr.).
Following the arrival of metal kettles, parching rice undoubtedly
became the preferred method; however, the Ojibwa were also recorded
for using a plant called scouring rush (Equisetum hymenale)
which was so fire resistant it could be heated red-hot without
burning. The rushes were woven tightly together to form mats that
could be suspended over the fire (Veenum Jr.). Rice was then turned
on these mats until roasted brown. Parching wild rice served two
main purposes: destroying the germ prevented the kernel from
sprouting so that it could be kept indefinitely; hardening the
kernel loosened the hull so it could be broken off and discarded.
Parching also scorched off the barbed end and any other rubbish that
remained on the rice.
After wild rice is parched or dried it must be hulled to remove
the close-fitting chaff. Men typically did this job because of its
strenuous nature, but women also participated sometimes. The hulling
process was accomplished through the construction of a bootaagan
which was a pit designed to hull rice. These pits were usually dug
into the ground and a ready-made pork barrel, lard tub, keg, or
metal pail was placed inside. In earlier times the bootaagan was
simply lined with clay or some type of skin. Once in the pit the
rice was either churned, pounded, flailed or tread upon to separate
the hulls. The most common method used was dancing or jigging which
simply consisted of the bootaagan and two support poles which the
dancer used to brace themselves. The jigger also wore special
moccasins which were usually new and had high ankles so the pants
could be tucked into them. In jigging the rice, the dancer worked
the rice vigorously with his feet against the sides of the bootaagan
in order to separate the chaff. Sometimes the Ojibwa sang songs to
accompany the person jigging and give him rhythm (Veenum Jr.).
Once hulling was complete the rice was transported to a windy
spot such as a rocky outcropping near the lakeshore or a spot on
high ground. The rice was then placed in large birch bark trays and
tossed vertically. By doing this the light weight chaff was carried
away in the wind and the kernels of rice settled back into the tray.
The trays themselves were among the largest constructed by the
Ojibwa. The bottoms measured approximately nine by thirteen inches
and their tops flared to about thirteen by twenty inches. Sturdy and
light, these trays were ideal for the task.
Once winnowing was completed, the rice was then ready for
storage. The Ojibwa used a number of different materials for
storage, but most commonly used were either animal hides or birch
bark containers. Birch bark is waterproof and also possesses
anti-fungal properties. When rice is stored within these containers
it keeps very well. As European traders began to arrive, Ojibwa
began to harvest extra rice each year and they used fawn-skins to
trade rice for other goods. The fawn-skin was commonly used as a
unit of trade to the European trader. Large quantities of rice were
traded to the fur buyers because they also depended on it for a
winter food. One other method of storage was to dig a pit on high
ground and burn a fire in the pit for two or three days to rid it of
moisture. They would then layer it with braided grasses and other
fiber to prepare it to hold the rice. These pits were usually six to
seven feet deep so they were below the frost line and concealed from
enemies who might plunder their reserves. Using these various
methods the Ojibwa would always store enough rice for the winter and
spring when they would use the sugar collected from maple to mix in
a special dish with wild rice (Vennum Jr.).
Wild rice also played a very important role in Ojibwa religious
ceremonies. During these events, rice was eaten as a feast food and
it was also part of an offering to the Manitou. Wild rice was also
thought to possess medicinal properties, thus whenever someone
became ill rice was commonly eaten as medicine. To this day an
annual celebration takes place in Ball Club on the Leech Lake
Reservation. This powwow is called “Mig-witch Manoomin” (thanks for
wild rice).
Neegoniwabungigaywin ~ The Future
Wild rice is still abundant in the northern lakes and rivers, but
will it remain that way? Threats to water quality resulting from
increased development and poor land use decisions may create a gray
future for the plant that has given life to so many. New threats
range from increased boat disturbance on native rice fields,
improper harvesting, and genetically modified strains of rice that
many Ojibwa fear may alter natural rice. These new threats do not go
unnoticed by the Ojibwa however. Many Ojibwa have joined forces to
stand against genetic modification of wild rice. The University of
Minnesota has been working on new strains of wild rice that could be
grown in commercial paddies. Although these new strains are supposed
to be all sterile male cultivars, a fear exists among the Ojibwa
people that this modified rice will cross with native rice and
affect genetic diversity of the native crops (Tribal College
Journal). There are strong opinions on both sides of the issue, and
with neither side backing down; this issue looks to be one that will
continue for some time.
“From birth to death, wild rice is important to
us,” said Gerald White, of the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe. “It's
our responsibility to protect all life forms, including wild
rice, for future generations.” (Ruble)
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Works Cited
Brown, Larry G. Personal Interview. 31 Mar 2007.
Danziger, Edmund J. The Chippewas of Lake Superior.
Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 1978.
Ruble, Renee. Minnesota Indians Faulting Wild Rice Genetic
Research at University of Minnesota. 21 May 2002. Online. 21 Apr
2007 <http://www.mindfully.org/GE/GE4/
Indians-Fault-Wild-Rice-Research21may02.htm>.
Roufs, Timothy G. An Ethnographic Biography of Paul Peter
Buffalo. 20 Feb 2007. Online.
<http://www.d.umn.edu.cla/faculty/troufs/Buffalo>.
“LCO Community Wrestles With Bio-tech Issues.” Tribal College
Journal 17.2 (2005):
<https://tribalcollegejournal.org/themag/backissues/winter2005/
winter2005oc.htm>.
Veenum Jr., Thomas. Wild Rice and the Ojibway People. St.
Paul, Minnesota: Minnesota Historical Society, 1988.
Warren, William W. History of the Ojibway People. St.
Paul, Minnesota: Minnesota Historical Society, 1885.
Oelke, E.A. 1993. Wild rice: Domestication of a native North
American genus. p. 235-243. In: J. Janick and J.E. Simon (eds.),
New crops. Wiley, New York.
Lee, Sultzman. Ojibwe History. 21 Jun 2000. Online. 5 May
2007. <http://www.tolatsga.org/ojib.html>.