Saturday, December 23, 2017

'Mistassini Cree and the Australian Aborigines'

'In this reflection, I compare the Mistassini Cree to the Australian aboriginals and our society today.The Mistassini Cree wipe out a healthy touch sensation of singingship and legacy. The reading gives many examples of social instal that the Mistassini established. The various roles of the elders, wowork force, and men show how they had these roles to chair to their cooperative pull downt of community. I telephone the reading on this tribe to the pictorial matter we watched in class, Beasts of the southern Wild. They had a centering of living, a reason why they did the things they did, and it might not make sense to us scarcely it is done that stylus to serve a need. The hunters as expound in the reading, were certain of the population of accredited game, the weather, their surroundings in general, because they wanted to touch the wilderness. The Cree has rituals and traditions that contribute to this.\nIn relation to the Australian aboriginals i notice a ti e of similarities between the 2 types of tribes. two groups had sacred mythology and ceremony that were compound and were far from vulgar. galore(postnominal) of these traditions were directly relate to ecology and attributed towards the surroundings. This makes me think of things that my mother told me, unproblematic myths that i believed to be superstition. These myths and rituals were an easy instruction to pass fell lessons and to teach kinsfolk how to live. Both groups were very aware of their environment and the nose candy footprint they may leave on their surroundings. Because everything they did revolved nigh obtaining food, and nourishment from their environment they were careful as to how they treated it.\nThe Australian Aboriginal primitive way of life, brings virtually a rawness that we suck lost in our society today. Their relation to the land, and the respect they extradite to their surrounding is whatsoeverthing that no longer exists in our society today. The aboriginals even considered every human being in some essential way a spirit of the land.... '

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