The
name Turtle Island comes from the
Aboriginal Creation story
Turtle
Island was renamed North America after a Spanish explorer, Amerigo Vespucci

The
Anishinaabek are one of the most widespread nations of the Aboriginal People of
Turtle Island. There are Anishinaabek people living from The Canadian
Sub-arctic across Turtle Island into Mexico. Many Native
nations say that they are Anishinabek such as the Ojibway also called
Chippewa, the Odawa, the Potawatomie, The Algonquins in Ontario's North-East
and others. There is many nations similar to the Anishinaabek such as the
Algonquin related people in the East Coast, the Arapaho nation and the
Tsitsistas nation, also known as Cheyenne in the Prairies, and the Yurok nation
on the West Coast. The Anishinaabek language is a widely accepted aboriginal
language in Turtle Island. The word Niiji is an Anishinaabek word originally
used by the Ojibway and Cree to mean friend.
Lately
Aboriginal People of Turtle Island often use the term Niiji to address each
other and themselves equivalent to the meaning of the word Indian. The word
Indian originates in one version from Spanish and in another version again from
Spaniards calling Turtle Island Natives people from India, Indians. The term
Niiji very clearly defines the person as an aboriginal from Turtle Island other
than Inuit. When used today, the term Indian could refer to a person from India
or to a person of any aboriginal nationality on any of the continents with
populations that lead lifestyles similar to those of the aboriginal people on
Turtle Island. Similar to the term Indians referring to Turtle Island
aboriginal people, the aboriginal people in the Arctic were called Eskimos. The
term Eskimo is not a term that the aboriginal people of the Arctic called
themselves but rather a term used by Europeans that originated from the Cree
language calling people raw meat eaters. Due to the term Eskimo not being a
term the aboriginal people in the Arctic introduced, the term Eskimo was
replaced by what the aboriginal people in the Arctic call themselves, which is
the word Inuit. Inuk means man in the language of the aboriginal people of the
Arctic and Inuit means men in their language. Their language is called
Inuktitut. The word Niiji has already replaced the term Indian in many cases
among Native youth and elders and it could completely replace the term Indian
just like the word Eskimo was replaced by name Inuit.
Every
Native nation in Turtle Island has it's distinct language and name. The name
Niiji doesn't replace the names of nations; it replaces the wider term Indian
that covers all Native nations and at the same time clearly refers to to the
aboriginal people of Turtle Island and excludes any other aboriginal nation
also referred to as Indians. In Europe, Asia and Africa there are numerous
nations with all of them acknowledging to be Europeans, Asians or Africans.
Natives in Turtle Island that address themselves as Niiji, call themselves
Niijis regardless of the nation they are from, just like Europeans, Asians and
Africans call themselves Europeans, Asians and Africans.

People
often talk about an Indian language and ignore the fact that just like there is
no one single language spoken by all Europeans, there is no one single language
spoken by all aboriginal people of Turtle Island. The name Niiji makes it clear
that there is not one language spoken by aboriginal people of Turtle Island due
to the fact that, there is no such thing as a language called Niiji. Just like
there is not just one language in any of the continents, there is no just one
language among the aboriginal people of Turtle Island.
The
aboriginal people of Turtle Island have chosen to refer to their continent by
the original name for it which is Turtle Island. They have chosen the flag with
the four colors: white, yellow, red and black to be the general flag
representing all aboriginal people of Turtle Island and in some cases also the
non-aboriginals on Turtle Island. They have chosen a general symbol of the
Medicine Wheel with the four colors, as the insignia of Turtle Island. The
Turtle Island aboriginal people's use of the name Niiji to address themselves
is only natural.
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