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A silhouette of a person with footprints on a gray background in Ottawa.

Traditional Stories and Creation Stories

First Peoples remember their origins through oral histories passed down by elders in each generation.

These narratives describe the creation of the world and how First Peoples came to live in it. More than legends, they embody a view of how the world fits together, and how human beings should behave in it.

Some oral histories refer to a time before human occupation. Others mark significant geographical, spiritual and life events that have occurred over the millennia.

Listen to traditional stories and creation stories told by six Indigenous storytellers from communities across Canada. Each recording is available in the respective Indigenous language and in English, and French transcripts are available.

Haida – The Creation of Haida Gwaii

GwaaGanad (Diane Brown), Haida HlGaagilda Llnagaay (Skidegate Village), Haida Gwaii, British Columbia

Haida recording

English recording

Gwi’chin – When Fish Were Men

Joanne Snowshoe, Fort McPherson, Northwest Territories

Gwich’in recording

English recording

Piikani – The Story of Napi

Wilfred Yellow Wings, Fort Macleod, Alberta

Piikani recording

English recording

Anishinabe (Algonquin) – The Otter

Joan Tenasco, Kitigan Zibi, Quebec

Anishinabe recording

English recording

Inuit – The Story of Nuliajuk

Peter Irniq, Naujaat, Nunavut

Inuktitut recording

English recording

Mi’kmaq – Mi’kmaq Creation Story

Stephen Augustine, Elsipogtog (Big Cove), New Brunswick

Mi’kmaq recording

English recording

A detailed map of Canadian cities, including the location of the Canadian Museum of History in Ottawa.

Locations of the six origin stories

A Vital Presence

First Peoples are not the “first immigrants.” They are the original peoples, and the fastest-growing population in this land. Over 1 million Indigenous people live in more than 600 villages, towns and cities across the country. They speak more than 50 different Indigenous languages, some as different from one another as English is from Mandarin.

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