Native American Stories and Songs
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  • Other Hour Long Documentaries by Milt and Jamie Lee

Maggie Paul / Passamaquoddy, from Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada 

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Maggie Paul was a surprise gift in so many ways. After traveling two days from New York up through Maine, we crossed the border into Canada and parked our weary bodies into one more hotel. Maggie met us wearing a pair of comfortable sweat pants and a red T-shirt and looking like somebody's favored auntie—until she opened her mouth to sing. There is something about Maggie that is so light and spirited you think she might just float away, pulled up by the fine strands of the creator’s web.

New Brunswick is not Maggie’s homeland. The Passamaquoddy people are located in Maine on Passamaquoddy Bay. She moved north when she married and now lives on St. Mary’s Reserve in Fredericton. She is married to Stanley Paul and has five children and eight grandchildren. Her mother, who has passed away, raised Maggie and her brothers and sisters alone, supporting them by braiding sweetgrass for a living.

The woodlands and waters of the area provided an abundant and healthy diet to the original Passamaquoddy. In summers, they fished the coastal waters and gathered what they needed from nature. During the winter months the tribe would move inland to the forests. They became great craftspeople, known for their jewelry, baskets, woodcarving and canoes. They lived in wigwams, which were dome shaped houses built with saplings, bark, and rushes with woven mats for the interior and doors.

Listen to a sample of the show here


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