Minnesota is home to more bands of the Ojibwe or Chippewa nation than any
other state.
All but one of the seven federally recognized Ojibwe reservations (the Red
Lake
Reservation) have come together as the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe. The tribe is
comprised of the Bois Forte (formerly Nett Lake), the Fond du Lac, Grand
Portage, Leech
Lake (which has two bands, the Mississippi and Pillanger Bands), the Mille
Lacs and the
White Earth Ojibwe. These seven bands on six reservations total nearly 13,000
Ojibwe
making the Minnesota Chippewa one of the largest single bodies of one tribe.
Each band/reservation has its own distinctive flag but their is also a
separate flag
employed by the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe. That flag is white and bears the
seal of the
Minnesota Chippewa Tribe in the center.
The seal depicts a sunrise over the lakes of Minnesota and traditional
elements of Ojibwe
life along the shore. These include a typical Ojibwe home of the eighteenth
century and
a birchbark canoe. Many of the individual elements found in the seal of the
Minnesota
Chippewa Tribe can be found in the seal employed by its constituent bands. The
rising
sun, for example, is featured in the flag of the Mille Lacs Band; while the
conifer tree
can be found in the flag of the Leech Lake Ojibwe.
Surrounding the seal is a yellow band bearing the tribe's name across the
top and
repeating it in the Anishinabe language of the Ojibwe at the base of the seal.
The date,
June 18, 1934, the founding date of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe appears below
the
Anishinabe spelling. Ringing the seal within the yellow band, starting at the
beginning of
the native spelling and going counter clockwise ending at the end of the
Anishinabe
spelling is a thin black arrow.
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