Totem poles do not honor gods. They tell stories.
No, the Oneida people did not traditionally create totem poles. Totem poles are primarily associated with the Indigenous cultures of the Pacific Northwest Coast, such as the Haida and Tlingit. The Oneida, part of the Iroquois Confederacy located in the northeastern United States, had different cultural practices and artistic traditions that did not include totem poles. Instead, they expressed their identity and spirituality through other forms of art and storytelling.
The First Nations/Native Americans used to create totem poles using big cedar tree trunks.
OMG they didn't have totem poles! Whoever asked this Q is out of their mind! You should blush! :-* that i the kiss sign its supposed to be some1 blushing! GET IT????? Oooh people r reatards!
No, only a few tribes on the west coast of Canada and the north-west coast of the USA made totem poles.
NO! They didn't make totem poles!!!!!!
Totem Poles.
The Anishinabe (Ojibwe) people did not carve Totem as totem poles are most well know. Artists did beadwork, birchbark boxes and baskets and dreamcatchers. The clan (totemic system) was used however. Of the original 5 clans there are now more than 21, represented by various symbolic animals such as Wolf, deer, whitefish,loon and bear to name a few.
The totem poles were made to tell stories of the past
Totem poles are and were made from large tree trunks.
No they did not make totem poles.
The plural form of "totem pole" is "totem poles." To form the plural, simply add an "s" to "pole," making it "poles," while keeping "totem" unchanged. Therefore, when referring to multiple totem poles, you would write it as "totem poles."