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For traditiona­l Mi'kmaw adult eel fishers, it's not about the money

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Sis'moqon

Mi'kmaw fishermen thrust a rake-like spear deep into a hole cut in the ice on a river in Antigonish, N.S., during a cold February af‐ ternoon, hoping to catch an adult eel and honour the legacy of their ances‐ tors in the process.

"The main thing is to feed our people - the elderly, the sick," said Terry Denny. "It's important you're doing something that you are not getting a cash reward."

Eel, or katew, is a tradi‐ tional food source for the Mi'kmaq. Ceremonial­ly signif‐ icant, they're often eaten in a broth as a baby's first meal upon arriving from the spirit world and as an elder's final meal before their trip home to the spirit world.

But some of the fisher‐ men who are keeping the tra‐ ditional fishery alive are noticing a decline in eel num‐ bers - a sign of powerful forces threatenin­g it.

Nova Scotia is home to the American eel, which the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature has classified as an endangered species because of threats such as pollution, climate change and overfishin­g.

The recent surge in both commercial and unautho‐ rized fishing for elver, or ba‐ by eels, has placed further strain on the species.

The fishing of baby eels can be a hot topic, clouded by judgments, difference­s in opinions, and undefined treaty rights. This has led to a range of opinions among Mi'kmaq and brought discus‐ sions about moderate liveli‐ hood harvesting rights to the forefront.

Kerry Prosper is an elder and knowledge keeper from Paqtnkek Mi'kmaw Nation who feels a connection to his ancestors when he is fishing adult eels, which he has done for most of his life.

Prosper does it to share his catch with his community, although he said he isn't har‐ vesting this year due to the low numbers.

"If the large eels are fished out now into deple‐ tion, I can see the elvers falling very fast. But now we have the elver fishing going at the same time, and how are the big eels going to re‐ populate if they're taking the baby ones?" he said.

The life cycle and move‐ ment of eels are surrounded by mystery, and the modern harvesting of eels, sur‐ rounded by contention.

The American eel has a complex life cycle that begins in the Sargasso Sea in the North Atlantic, where adult eels lay eggs that hatch into leaf-like creatures that are transporte­d north and west to North America by way of the Gulf Stream.

By the time they approach the coastlines, they've under‐ gone two transforma­tions: from their transparen­t leaflike form into tiny trans‐ parent glass eels, and then into pigmented elvers that enter freshwater estuaries to grow into adults.

High demand for eel in Asia, and the collapse of eel fishing in Europe, due to Eu‐ ropean eels being declared critically endangered, has pushed the market value of elvers as high as $5,000 a kilogram.

That led to a surge of har‐ vesting and prompted the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to cancel the fishery, which normally starts in late March, for the second year in a row.

Out on the ice

Winter harvesting of katew today - with its whipping winds, long arduous hours and a good chance you may go home empty-handed - is a selfless act, done to provide for the community.

It's a sacrifice that tradi‐ tional eel fishers from Eska‐ soni like Aaron Prosper, Floyd Prosper, Bob Denny Jr., Terry Denny and his sons made on a recent February afternoon.

Terry Denny is a knowl‐ edge keeper, storytelle­r and practition­er of traditiona­l harvesting methods passed down to him from his father, who told him that eeling is done for the community. They battle the wind and cold for those who cannot do it themselves.

Eel holds an important place within Mi'kmaw cere‐ monial settings, and holds broader meanings in the Mi'kmaw concepts of reci‐ procity, shown in the way eel has historical­ly been shared within the community.

"[When I come out eel fishing] I feel part of my fa‐ ther, my grandfathe­r and their fathers before them" said Terry Denny.

"As long as people do this in a good way, we will have it for a long time. Money and the economy … this cannot supply this. We are here to take what we need and [as much as] people ask for."

Denny also stressed the importance of food offerings to the spirit world. He said his great-grandfathe­r was al‐ ways sure to offer an eel to the fire in prayer, even when he didn't have enough to feed his family.

The sacrifice of one eel to the spirit world signifies the lack of greed in these cultural traditions.

"We cannot take all, we must give back. The spirit world takes care of us when we give back," said Denny. "When we do not walk with the spirit world … then greed, hate, all those bad things come with that."

Aaron Prosper is a Mi'k‐ maw artist and health con‐ sultant who is deeply in‐ volved with efforts to pre‐ serve and revitalize Mi'kmaw culture, language and tradi‐ tions in Nova Scotia. His family used to clean and package the eels they caught and give them out to differ‐ ent families, elders and peo‐ ple in need, he said.

He's noticed a change in the number of eels they catch over the past 15 years. It used to be that they could bring home about 50 in a day, meaning they only needed one trip to provide enough eels for the commu‐ nity. Today the outings yield much smaller numbers.

"There's been a couple of guys that have come out, make about 20 holes, and they don't catch any," he said. "That's concerning."

As these men leave the snowy, glistening landscape, a sense of anticipati­on and satisfacti­on fills their conver‐ sations as they mention who they are going to share their catch with.

They carry on the legacy of their ancestors and contin‐ ue these time-honoured tra‐ ditions for at least another day.

'The worst thing you could do to the fishery'

The voices of elders like Ker‐ ry Prosper are underrepre‐ sented in the discussion­s around the elver fishery. He believes the future of Mi'k‐ maw food security is in jeop‐ ardy.

"People are accumulati­ng intergener­ational wealth through this elver fishing, millions of dollars … and at the same time really putting our intergener­ational food security in jeopardy," he said. "I think the introducti­on of elver fishing was the worst thing you could do to the fishery.

"It's like taking the lobster and selling the eggs too... I don't understand."

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