An curved arrow pointing right. Manoomin, meaning "the good berry," is a type of wild rice that has been harvested by the Ojibwe people in the Great Lakes region of North America for centuries.
From LeahConnecting with my Ojibwe heritage by learning to harvest wild rice MPR News senior editor Leah Lemm walks with her son Marvin from his school bus stop on Jan. 2. So, she set out with a ...
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'Finding Manoomin': Connecting with Ojibwe heritage by learning to harvest wild riceI’m Leah Lemm, citizen of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe. I’m the senior editor ... A Search for the Spirit of Wild Rice.” The film follows my journey as I connect with the harvest and ...
Leanna Goose grew up ricing manoomin (wild rice) as a member of the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe. “Wild rice is culturally ...
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Decades after it disappeared, wild rice is booming again on the upper Mississippi RiverWisconsin's rich history of wild rice harvesting dates back hundreds of years to the arrival of the Ojibwe people, who came in search of food that grew on water. Today, it's still a central part ...
Over the past 40 years, the amount of Manoomin has decreased by about 50%, wild rice technician at Trout Lake Station Sagen Quale said. Manoomin is Ojibwe for wild rice and translates to “good berry.” ...
Central to their platform and message is saving the state grain — wild rice, manoomin in the Ojibwe language, psin in Dakota.
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