Onhoüa Chetek8e means “From Yesterday To Today,” and it is the result of a man’s strive to share knowledge about the Huron-Wendat Nation. The main structures of the village are a longhouse, a shaman’s hut, and a tepee. Between these larger structures are also a sweat lodge, a smoke room, a dryer, a totem pole, and a hut with some canoes. The centerpiece of the village is the longhouse, which embodies and mirrors the social structure of the Huron-Wendat society. In spite of the limited resources and rudimentary (yet ingenious)…