Our Maine Street's Aroostook Issue 28 : Spring 2016 | Page 31

A Center of Culture and Community by Melissa Lizotte When visitors walk into the Micmac Cultural Community Education Center, they get a rare glimpse into early Micmac life. In the far right corner, a birch bark canoe hangs over a glass display case of baskets. As you look around, you’ll see more displays of porcupine quill baskets, harpoons and hunting spears. A large model of a tobacco pipe used in sacred ceremonies sits below a poster that lists the names of Micmac war veterans. activities such as crafts, music, dancing, storytelling and men’s and women’s drum groups. Peter-Paul encourages tribal members, including those in the drum groups, to educate non-tribal members who attend Mawiomi. “When they do these songs, I’ve asked them if they could please explain to the audience what these songs are, why we sing them and the significance of each of them,” PeterPaul says. “So if you ever go to a function of ours, you With one glance, the Micmac museum looks like any may get to experience some of that.” other historical museum, but for Edward Peter-Paul, the Aroostook Band of Micmacs tribal chief, and Cultural Peter-Paul wants non-tribal members to know that the Director Simon Nevin, the cultural center is more than Micmacs have a culture that is unique and different from other cultures. The Micmac community is a close-knit just artifacts. community that is like “having a town, a church and a “Everything in there reminds me of something from my huge family all in one.” life,” Peter-Paul says. “If I was to do something bad, then the people in the The Micmacs opened the cultural center in August 2000, community would look at my family in a different way, nine years after they gained federal recognition as a tribe. not just me,” Peter-Paul says. “So we all have to act a Aside from the museum, the cultural center provides certain way because we represent our family.” Micmac social services such as housing, education, finance, healthcare, Indian child welfare and education. But modern culture has brought many changes to The museum may be located in the Micmac community, traditional Micmac values. “The Micmacs,” Nevin says, but any members of the general public are welcome to “used to be a self-sufficient tribe. They relied on hunting and fishing for food sources. These practices helped tour the museum and attend Micmac cultural events. continue the Micmac’s spiritual connection to the land One such event is the Mawiomi of Tribes, the annual and the natu