Thursday, December 24, 2009

"Christ My Savior", © 1980 Norval Morrisseau

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"Christ My Savior", © 1980 Norval Morrisseau
/Click on image to Enlarge/
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"In some parts of Ontario there are Ojibway Indians who claim to belong to the Society of Heaven People. Some call it the Wahbeenowin Society-the Vision Society. The Ojibway belief states that in heaven there are what the Indians of this society call Heaven People, Okeezhikokah Eninnewuk. These are guardians of heaven, not angels, but people who are Indians with fairer skin and, as I have said, dressed in scarlet tunics with a hood. The members of this society dress in the same manner as the Heaven People at their rites and ceremonies and great feasts, and hold dances in their honour. Each members believes he is going to heaven and has a number printed or punched with a nail on a half-moon badge made out of tin or other metal. This badge is worn on the hood, and it is believed that when a member dies the real Heaven People will ask the supernatural body what number it has, and upon submitting that number it will be admitted to heaven."
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Norval Morrisseau

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* The painting in this posting: "Christ My Savior", 24"x20", © 1980 Norval Morrisseau /Private Collection of Ugo Matulić a.k.a. Spirit Walker (Calgary, Alberta); / ; Norval Morrisseau quote from the book "Legends of My People The Great Ojibway" - Illustrated and told by Norval Morriseau, Edited by Selwyn Dewdney /© The Ryerson Press, 1965; ISBN: 0-7700-0110-6/

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