- William Commanda
William Commanda (Anishinàbe name: "Ojigkwanong") is an
Algonquin elder, born November 11, 1913 in Kitigàn-zìbì, Quebec (Garden River/Riviere Desert), nearManiwaki, Quebec , 130 kilometres (81 miles) north of Ottawa in theGatineau River valley. Commanda is the great-grandson of Chief Pakinawatik who led his people in 1854 from the Lake of Two Mountains to Réserve de la Rivière Désert, also known as the Kitigàn-zìbì Reserve, along theGatineau River . Commanda worked as a guide, trapper and woodsman, a birch bark canoe maker and craftsman. Commanda was Keeper of several AlgonquinWampum Shell Belts which held records of prophecies, history, treaties and agreements. The three Wampum Belts under his care are:
* theSeven Fires Prophecy Belt;
* theJay Treaty Border Crossing Belt; and
* the Three Figure Welcoming/Agreement Wampum Belt.Commanda served as Band Chief of the
Kitigàn-zìbì Anishinàbeg First Nation from 1951 to 1970. In 1987 at the fourth First Ministers Conference on inherent rights and self-government for Aboriginal people, Commanda began teaching about the messages of the wampum belts. He was invited in 1990 to provide a traditional blessing of the Canadian Human Rights Monument in Ottawa with theDalai Lama . In 1998, Commanda participated in a ceremony at which he presentedNelson Mandela with an eagle feather on behalf of the First Nations of Canada. That same year, Commanda organizedElders Without Borders , a gathering of Aboriginal Elders and spiritual leaders from both North and South America.External links
* [http://www.rhythmsoftheglobe.com/mind/profiles_eldercommanda.htm biography from Rhythms of the Globe]
* [http://www.ainc-inac.gc.ca/ks/3062_e.html short biography from INAC]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.