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Through bilingual poetry, Naomi Mcilwraith explores the beauty of the intersection between
nêhiyawêwin, the Plains Cree language, and English,
âkayâs"mowin. A treatise to honour her father's facility in
nêhiyawêwin and her mother's beauty and generosity as an inheritor of Cree, Ojibwe, Scottish, and English,
kiyâm articulates a powerful yearning for family, history, peace, and love.
List of contents
kîkwaya kâ-masinahikâtêki ôta contents
Foreword Jenna Butler ix
The Sounds of Plains Cree: A Guide to Pronunciation xi
Family Poems
The Road to Writer's Block (A Poem to Myself) 5
Trademark Translation 12
paskwâhk | On the Prairie 13
kiya kâ-pakaski-nîmihitoyan | You Who Dance SoBrightly 15
tawâw | There Is Room, Always Room for One More 17
Perfect Not Perfect 20
tawastêw | The Passage Is Safe 21
pahkwêsikan | Bread 23
ê-wîtisânîhitoyâhk asici pîkiskwêwin | Language Family28
ê-wîtisânîhitoyâhk êkwa ê-pêyâhtakowêyâhk | Relative Clause33
Critical Race Theory at Canadian Tire 39
Reclamation PoemsCree Lessons 43
tânisi ka-isi-nihtâ-âhpinihkêyan | How to Tan a Hide 45
aniki nîso nâpêwak kâ-pîkiskwêcik | Two Men Talking 49
nohtâwiy opîkiskwêwin | Father Tongue 52
ninitâhtâmon kititwêwiniwâwa | I Borrow Your Words 58
aniki nîso nâpêwak kâ-masinahikêcik | Two Men Writing61
sâpohtawân | Ghost Dance 62
ê-kî-pîcicîyâhk | We Danced Round Dance 66
A Few Ideas fromamiskwacî-wâskahikanihkThe Young Linguist 73
tânisi ka-isi-nihtâ-pimîhkêyan | How to Make Pemmican74
History Poemsmaskihkiy maskwa iskwêw ôma wiya ohci | For Medicine BearWoman 87
mistahi-maskwa 91
Take This Rope and This Poem (A Letter for Big Bear) 94
sôhkikâpawi, nitôtêm | Stand Strong, My Friend 98
kâh-kîhtwâm | Again and Again 102
nikî-pê-pimiskân | I Came This Way by Canoe 107
Spinning 110
Practicing for My Defence 112
Like a Bead on a String 115
ihkatawâw ay-itwêhiwêw | The Marsh Sends a Message 116
kakwêcihkêmowin ohci kânata otâcimowina 117
A Question for Canadian History 118
kiskinohamâkêwin ohci kânata otâcimowina 119
An Instruction for Canadian History 120
kiyâm | Let It Be 121
Notes on the Poems 123
Cree-English Correspondences 127
Bibliography 153
Publication Credits 157
Acknowledgements 159
About the author
Naomi McIlwraith is an educator, poet, and essayist,with a mixed Cree, Ojibwe, Scottish, and English inheritance. Shecurrently works at Grant MacEwan University and has held instructionalpositions at the University of Alberta and the King's UniversityCollege.
Summary
Contemplates language loss and recovery in the twenty-first century, by relating one woman's journey in learning an Indigenous language.