Great Law of the Meoquanee
Great Law of the Meoquanee ᎠᏥᎸᏉᏗ ᎠᏁᎯ atsilvquodi anedi | |
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Council of Seven Fires | |
Enacted by | Council of Seven Fires |
Date signed | 15 June 1989 |
Date commenced | 17 July 1989 |
Legislative history | |
Bill introduced in the | Council of Seven Fires |
Introduced by | Chief Anigatay Willow |
First reading | 5 September 1984 |
Second reading | 12 December 1907 |
Third reading | 7 March 1988 |
Status: In force |
The Great Law (Meoquanee: ᎠᏁᎯ) functions as the primary constitution of the Meoquanee Nation, formally adopted on July 22, 1989. It superseded the original constitution established in 1910, which had initially structured a democratic governance model among the seven Meoquanee-speaking tribes— the Nasawi, Wyanwa, Kathanti, Aelamet, Ashwaki, and Dohute.
History
Preamable
Hear us, Great Creator, in collaboration with the people of the seven nations, we establish the Tree of the Great Law. This tree is planted in our ancestral lands, within the territory of the Meoquanee people. We christen this tree the Tree of the Great Long Leaves. Beneath its shade, we lay soft, white, feathery down from the globe thistle as seats for all of us. We hereby establish ourselves as the leaders and pillars of the Meoquanee Nation, representing the foundation of the Great Law. We place ourselves upon these cushioned seats, under the sprawling branches of the Tree of Great Law. Here, we will oversee the Great Meoquanee Nation, and all significant matters concerning the nation will be deliberated in this sacred space, under our watchful eyes and those of our fellow peers.