Manidookewin: Exploring community wellness with Elders and knowledge keepers in Whitesand First Nation

dc.contributor.authorWilloughby, Kyra
dc.contributor.supervisorWright Cardinal, Sarah
dc.contributor.supervisorAllan, Billie
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-02T20:17:57Z
dc.date.available2025-05-02T20:17:57Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.degree.departmentSocial Dimensions of Health
dc.degree.levelMaster of Arts MA
dc.description.abstractThis research explores community health and wellness guided by the wisdom of three Elders and knowledge keepers from Whitesand First Nation and is rooted in Anishinaabe ways of knowing and being. Using Indigenous research methodologies and guided interviews informed by Jo-Ann Archibald’s (2008) Indigenous Storywork framework, this study examines the research question, “How do Elders and knowledge keepers in Whitesand First Nation define community wellness?”. Through an Indigenized thematic analysis, the conversations with these Elders and knowledge keepers revealed four main themes along with subthemes that provide insights into our community wellness practices as Anishinaabe people from Whitesand First Nation. These bundles of knowledge were organized in a visual representation of a medicine wheel and were placed in the corresponding sectors that represent the life cycle for us as Anishinaabe people. The first theme was Culture and it was placed in the East, Waabinong, which included the subthemes of Language, Cultural Resiliency and Resurgence, and Sense of Belonging. The second theme, Land, was placed in the South, Zhaawanang, and contains the subthemes of Medicine and Healing, and Source of Life. The third theme, placed in the West, Ningaabii-anong, was Community, animated by the subthemes of Intergenerational Learning, Taking Care of one Another, and Roles and Responsibilities. The last theme that revealed itself was Spirituality and this was placed in the North, Kiiwedinong. The subthemes within this section include Ceremony, Prayer, and Interconnection. This study provides understandings of Anishinaabe community wellness and offers insights to the roots of Anishinaabe wisdom and knowledge.
dc.description.scholarlevelGraduate
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1828/22110
dc.languageEnglisheng
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAvailable to the World Wide Web
dc.subjectAnishinaabe
dc.subjecthealth and wellness
dc.subjectElders and Knowledge Keepers
dc.subjectWhitesand First Nation
dc.subjectIndigenous
dc.subjectholistic wellness
dc.subjectcommunity wellness
dc.titleManidookewin: Exploring community wellness with Elders and knowledge keepers in Whitesand First Nation
dc.typeThesis

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