The Naskapi are an Indigenous people of the subarctic, native to the vast boreal forests and open tundra of the Labrador Peninsula in what is now northern Quebec. Their ancestral name for this homeland — St'aschinuw, meaning "our land" — reflects a relationship with the land that has defined them for thousands of years. For most of their history, the Naskapi were nomadic hunters, moving seasonally across immense distances in small family groups, following the great caribou herds that supplied nearly everything they needed: food, clothing, tools, and shelter.
European contact began in the early seventeenth century, with Jesuit missionaries arriving and French traders establishing a presence in the region. The fur trade drew the Naskapi into a commercial economy and brought new goods, new dependencies, and new diseases. Because of their remote location and mobile way of life, the Naskapi had less sustained contact with missionaries than many other First Nations, and traditional spiritual practices persisted long after Christianity had taken root in southern Indigenous communities.
The twentieth century brought wrenching dislocations. A series of famines in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries severely reduced the population. Government interventions in the mid-twentieth century led to forced relocations — first to Fort Chimo, then to the Schefferville region — where the Naskapi often arrived with little preparation and lived in difficult conditions. Following years of negotiation, the Naskapi signed the Northeastern Quebec Agreement in 1978, securing land rights, hunting and fishing protections, and the foundation for self-government. The community of Kawawachikamach, built largely by Naskapi hands between 1980 and 1983, became their permanent home. In 1984, the Cree-Naskapi Act made them among the first self-governing bands in Canada.
The village of Kawawachikamach sits near the southern end of Lake Matemace, roughly fifteen kilometers northeast of Schefferville in the remote Côte-Nord region of Quebec. Accessible only by train from Sept-Îles or by small aircraft, the community is genuinely isolated from the broader Canadian population. Yet within that isolation, a full community life has taken shape. The village includes a school, a health center, a community radio station that broadcasts in the Naskapi language, a recreation center, a police station, and a band office.
The Naskapi language — known as Iyuw Iyimuun — is the mother tongue of virtually all community members, and it is both spoken and written. English serves as the second language, though younger members increasingly have some French as well. The language is not merely a tool of communication; it is woven through the landscape itself, expressing in sound and vocabulary the sights, smells, and rhythms of the northern land where the Naskapi have always lived.
Traditional harvesting remains central to daily life. Hunting, fishing, and trapping continue to supply a significant portion of the community's food and raw materials. Caribou remain a cultural touchstone — they appear throughout Naskapi craftsmanship and are a major theme in the community's arts. The broader economy includes adventure tourism, construction, fur trapping, and arts and crafts. The Naskapi Development Corporation oversees economic initiatives, and the community co-owns Tshiuetin Rail Transportation Inc., the rail service connecting the region to the south. Development projects in hydroelectric power, runway maintenance, and resource management are part of an ongoing effort to build lasting prosperity.
The Naskapi are regarded as nominally Christian, with a mixture of traditional spiritual beliefs continuing alongside and sometimes blended into that Christian identity. An Anglican church is present in Kawawachikamach, and Catholic and other Christian influences have touched the community over generations through missionary contact. However, genuine evangelical faith is rare, and the line between cultural Christianity and living, Scripture-rooted faith is not clearly drawn for most.
The traditional Naskapi spiritual worldview understands the world as filled with the souls of animals, natural forces, and human beings. Every creature, plant, and element of the landscape was believed to have its own spirit, and human wellbeing depended on maintaining a respectful relationship with those spirits. The Naskapi held a deeply individual form of spirituality — given their historically dispersed, family-based way of life, each hunter related personally to the spirit world with little reliance on collective ritual or religious hierarchy. Central to this worldview was the concept of Mista'peo, the "Great Man" — an inner spirit companion believed to dwell in the heart of each person, guiding the individual through dreams and inner promptings. Paying attention to dreams, living honestly, and treating animals and neighbors with generosity were seen as the path to receiving the Great Man's help in hunting and in life.
Shamans also played a role in Naskapi spiritual life, employing practices such as the shaking tent rite — in which the shaman communed with spiritual forces on behalf of the community — as well as scapulimancy, dream interpretation, and drumming rituals to seek guidance or foretell future events. Disease was understood as the result of spiritual causes, and healing was bound up with the spirit world. Over time, Christian elements entered the Naskapi worldview and blended with these older beliefs, producing a hybrid spirituality that persists in various forms today.
The Bible has not been fully translated into the Naskapi language. This means that for a people whose very identity is inseparable from their language, access to the living Word of God in the tongue of their hearts remains limited.
The deepest need of the Naskapi is the same as that of every people on earth: to know Jesus Christ, the one in whom true life is found. Despite the presence of church buildings and the influence of Christian mission over many generations, there is no strong evangelical community among the Naskapi, and few if any disciples who are actively passing the faith on to others.
The absence of Scripture in the Naskapi language is a significant obstacle. Language carries identity for the Naskapi in a way that runs deep — to speak Naskapi is to be Naskapi, and the community has invested enormously in preserving that tongue precisely because they understand what is lost when a people can no longer hear truth in their own voice. A people who have worked so hard to keep their language alive deserve to encounter the gospel in it.
The geographic isolation of Kawawachikamach compounds these challenges. Reaching the community requires intentional effort, and sustaining long-term ministry presence demands workers who are genuinely committed to the people. Younger generations navigating questions of identity, education, and opportunity need to hear that the God who made them knows them by name — in Naskapi.
Pray that God would stir the hearts of Naskapi men and women toward a personal, living faith in Jesus Christ — not merely the Christianity of history, but a transforming encounter with the living Lord.
Ask the Lord to raise up Bible translators with the skill and calling to bring the Scriptures into the Naskapi language, so that God's Word can be heard, read, and treasured in the language of the community's own heart.
Pray for any believers already present in Kawawachikamach — that they would be strengthened, rooted in Scripture, and emboldened to share Christ with their families and neighbors.
Intercede for the children and young people of the community, that amid pressures to leave for education and economic opportunity, they would be anchored in the hope of the gospel and become a generation of strong Naskapi disciples.
Ask the Lord to send workers — whether from outside the community or raised up from within — who will invest deeply in the people of Kawawachikamach with patience, love, and faithfulness.
Scripture Prayers for the Naskapi in Canada.
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |


