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There are about 614 bands or tribes, most have reserves, most are in Western Canada.
loss of land, making them move to reserves where they were confined to one area
One can find Aboriginal Paintings in national parks and reserves and in rural areas and are very popular paintings bought by different kinds of people.
An aboriginal mission is a place/church where Aboriginies were kept to be converted to Christians and to be influenced by European culture. A reserve is a place set aside for the aboriginies to live in alone
European colonisation had a devastating impact on Aboriginal communities and cultures. Aboriginal people were subjected to a range of injustices, including mass killings or being displaced from their traditional lands and relocated on missions and reserves in the name of protection
No, originally it was the aboriginal people, then Europeans came and took it over. So the original people there were placed in reserves, and they are not currently leading Canada.
Aboriginal Missions and reserves were protected areas where Aborigines were housed, although often at the expense of their culture. These missions had schools where the children were educated in white culture, rathyer than allowing the children to be educated in the ways of their people by their own elders and family members. In many cases, these missions (and schools) were established by Christian groups who had the Aborigines' interests at heart, but who also misunderstood the importance of the aboriginal culture. There were exceptions, where the Aborigines were free to live in as traditional a manner as they wished, or to become involved in white culture. Children were free to come and go from these schools. Government reserves were introduced when the Aborigines expressed their dissatisfaction with the missions, and these reserves were often simply the government taking over old missions. These tended to suppress the aboriginal culture, introducing white language, customs, education, foods, religion and culture at the expense of the Aborigines.
Aboriginal Missions and reserves were protected areas where Aborigines were housed, although often at the expense of their culture. These missions had schools where the children were educated in white culture, rathyer than allowing the children to be educated in the ways of their people by their own elders and family members. In many cases, these missions (and schools) were established by Christian groups who had the Aborigines' interests at heart, but who also misunderstood the importance of the aboriginal culture. There were exceptions, where the Aborigines were free to live in as traditional a manner as they wished, or to become involved in white culture. Children were free to come and go from these schools. Government reserves were introduced when the Aborigines expressed their dissatisfaction with the missions, and these reserves were often simply the government taking over old missions. These tended to suppress the aboriginal culture, introducing white language, customs, education, foods, religion and culture at the expense of the Aborigines.
Aborginies could not drink at pubs, or buy alcohol They were confined to specific locations called reserves, if unoffical people visited these reserves they could be arrested for "consorting" to leave the reserves aboriginal people had to apply for a certifcate of exemption, granted if officials thought they were sufficently developed. ths gave them certain limited rights but prevented them from going to the reserves and so cut them off from families.
Not sure if this is a math/ statistics question. Reserves are assets you hold, but are not using immediately. There are oil reserves, mineral reserves (like gold reserves) and cash reserves. I think you need to rephrase the question for a proper answer.
he has aboriginal heritage
define aboriginal