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Haisla people

The Haisla (also known as Xa’islak’ala, X̄a’islakʼala, X̌àʼislakʼala, X̣aʼislak’ala, Xai:sla) are an amalgamation of two bands, the Kitamaat people[2] of upper Douglas Channel and Devastation Channel and the Kitlope People of upper Princess Royal Channel and Gardner Canal in British Columbia, Canada.

Haisla
Xa’islak’ala, X̄a’islakʼala, X̌àʼislakʼala, X̣aʼislak’ala, Xai:sla
A Haisla whistle
Total population
1,500[1]
Regions with significant populations
British Columbia
Languages
English, Haisla
Religion
Native, Christianity,
Related ethnic groups
Heiltsuk, Wuikinuxv, Kwakiutl

The Kitamaat call themselves Haisla ("dwellers downriver"); and the Kitlope Henaaksiala ("dying off slowly"), a reference to their traditional longevity. The word Kitamaat comes from the Tsimshian people, who originate from the Prince Rupert and Metlakatla areas. While Kitamaat means people of the snow in Tsimshian, kit means people and amaat refers to territory or place.

The Haisla are a group indigenous people that have lived at Kitamaat Village as their natural area of residence in the North Coast region of British Columbia, and have occupied these lands, for at least 9,000 years.[3] Today, the they are located in Kitamaat Village, otherwise known as Kitimat Village. Home to about half of the 1700 Haisla, the village sits at the head of the Douglas Channel in British Columbia, while most of the people live elsewhere in the Greater Vancouver region.[3] Their language, Haisla, is named after them in most English usage, though its actual name is X̄a’islak̓ala. The name Haisla is derived from the Haisla word x̣àʼisla or x̣àʼisəla ("those living at the rivermouth, living downriver"). Along with the neighbouring Wuikinuxv and Heiltsuk people, they were incorrectly known in the past as the Northern Kwakiutl.

Naming

The name Kitamaat became misrepresented in 1955 when Alcan Industries entered to build an aluminum smelter in their territory. Attempting to bring a new face to the territory, Alcan called it the "town of the future" and changed the spelling to Kitimat.[4] The Haisla name for Kitamaat Village is Tsee-Motsa (Cʼimaucʼa), meaning Snag Beach.[5]

Location

Kitamaat Village, the Haisla reserve, is a short 20-minute drive south of the town of Kitimat. This town, the site of the aluminum smelter of Alcan Incorporated, is at the head of the Douglas Channel, a 90 km (56 mi) fjord that serves as saltwater corridor connecting the community, the town, and the port of Kitimat to the Pacific Ocean. Kitamaat is a Tsimshian name, applied by European explorers who asked their Tsimshian guides for the name of the place; it means "people of the snows" or "place of the snows". For hundreds of years, the Haisla people have occupied many village sites throughout their territory.

The government of the Haisla people is the Haisla Nation, with its offices in Kitimaat Village.

 
Canoe made by the Haisla members of the Kitimat Athlete club. It was donated as a gift to the UBC Museum of Anthropology in 1948 where it is displayed today.

Ellis Ross was a prominent elected Chief Councillor of the Haisla Nation, and one of the first First Nations leaders in Canada to team up with big oil and liquified natural gas (LNG) companies. He was full-time councillor from 2003 to 2016, and was followed by[6] Crystal Smith, the current Acting Chief.

Haisla clan system

Historically there were six clans within the Haisla people, each named after an animal that had historical significance to the tribe. It is believed that the sixth clan, the Crow, is nearly extinct and has merged with the Raven clan.[7] Each tribe has its own principal chief (Xay’mas), and they would meet whenever needed to discuss issues that would affect the entire tribe. These clan chiefs were very involved in their members' lives, including arranging marriages that would benefit the clan, distributing wealth, and building alliances between clans. The chiefs could take more than one wife, and wives of deceased chiefs could also be inherited by the new chief.[8] The Haisla people were some of the few northern North American indigenous nations that had a tiered class system consisting of noblemen, commoners and slaves. Nobleman had privileges that included participation in secret rituals, and the authority to direct commoners and slaves in labour activities. The nobility was recognized by their piercings: earlobes for the boys, and the lower lip for the girls.  Commoners were free to live as they would but couldn't participate in tribal governance. Slaves were generally war prisoners, were expected to be completely subservient, and could be killed at will.

Clan membership is inherited maternally, with titles and inheritance passing from uncle to nephew instead of the paternal father to son.[8] It is believed that this clan system was inherited from the migration of Tsimshian women as they spread throughout the northern tribes. Each clan has its own unique creation story, in conjunction with the entire tribe's creation story.[7]

  • Eagle (ai 'ǐksdukuyinihu, from ai 'ĭksdukuyå)
    • Crests: eagle, sea otter, ermine, owl, shag, hawk, halibut. Sometimes referred to as Owl Clan.
    • Clan cry / call: hai hai (imitation of the eagle scream)
  • Beaver (gĭtsǎ'k [Tsimshian] kaulu'n [Haisla equivalent])
    • Crests: beaver, dorsal fin of a dogfish, fireweed, beavers house, human figure holding its knees, k!yEk!a'n (giant beaver), posts or hat rings carved to look like beaver cuttings. Sometimes referred to as the Dogfish Clan.
    • Clan cry / call: t'am t'am (imitating a beaver hitting its tail on the water)
  • Raven (giga'k!eni)
    • Crests: raven, åsEwĕ'lgit (seated human figure with human faces carved or painted onto palms, ears, knees and feet), head and beak of a raven, gosEmdela'h (figure of a man, that when Ravens host a feast, is placed head down in the entrance way. There is human hair added, and as the raven chief enters the feast, the hair will touch him)
    • Clan cry / call: Gax gax (Sound of raven croaking)
  • Blackfish (Killer Whale / Orca) (hå'låxaini)
    • Crests: blackfish, dorsal fin or a blackfish, grizzly bear, twilight (red sky of the evening), human figure with another human figure at its breast (walai'gĭtlah), giant deep-sea bear (sa'nis), kelp heads, bu'sbakah (type of sea plant), bŭgwi's and bŭgwå's (Merman and mermaid, resembling humans or monkeys), mountain goat with only one horn, fireweed. Sometimes referred to as Grizzly Bear Clan.
    • Clan cry / call: hŏc hŏc (Imitating the blow hole of an orca)

G'psgolox totem pole

The G'psgolox totem pole is attached with a legend. It is told that, in 1872, a smallpox epidemic infected the people the Haisla Nation (located in the north of what we now call British Columbia), killing the vast majority of inhabitants. The leader of the Eagle Clan of the Haisla tribe, named Chief G'psgolox, lost his whole family due to the epidemic, as well as many of his friends. The legend tells that the bereaved Chief G'spgolox travelled to the forest and attempted to find help there. In the legend, he met with the spirits Tsooda and Zola, who told the Chief to go to the edge of a mountain at dawn, where he would see his deceased loved ones and learn to heal those still living. In the legend, this is how Chief G'psgolox complied and gained vital knowledge, learning the nature of the spirits, the Haisla spirit of continuance and transition. In appreciation of the spirits' help, Chief G'spgolox commissioned a nine-meter-tall totem pole with three figures. The bottom two figures commemorate the deceased and the top figure represents the Tsooda spirit.[9] The pole, while commemorating the dead, told the tale of Haisla survival. It later became known as The G’psgolox Pole.

In 1928 Olof Hanson, the Swedish vice-president to British Columbia, summited a request to the Canadian Department of Indian Affairs to acquire a pole, and in 1929 Olof was granted permission to cut down a totem pole and take it to Sweden. Olof Hanson chose the G'spgolox totem pole and cut it at the base. Olof Hanson took the pole while the Haisla were away due to seasonal living patterns, leaving the Haisla confused and wondering what had happened to the pole. The Norwegian emigrant named Iver Fougner (1870—1947) who chopped down the pole was employed as an Indian agent. He was a contact person between the authorities and Indigenous peoples in the vast district.[10] Olof donated the G’psgolox Pole to the Swedish National Museum of Ethnography that same year. The museum had the pole in storage for many years until they had a proper building to display it in 1980. The pole was on display in this building for 25 years.

When some members of the Haisla Nation heard rumours that the pole may have been up for display in Sweden, it was decided that Louisa Smith and Gerald Amos should travel to Sweden to investigate the rumours. Once they had confirmed that the pole in display was the G’psgolox Pole, the Haisla nation asked for its repatriation. In 1992, a member of the Museum of Ethnography travelled to the Haisla village in British Columbia, where he was told by the Haisla people that the pole was stolen from them and that they had been avidly searching for it without success since the theft in 1929. He was also told that, since the pole was found, it had to be returned to its rightful owners. The Haisla people offered to carve an identical totem replica in exchange for the original.[11] The museum agreed to the proposal by the Haisla people. This led to the Swedish government granting permission for the museum to gift the totem pole to the Haisla people in 1994, with the condition that the replica be an exact match to the original. In 2000, the Haisla community completed two replicas of the pole. One of the replicas were given to Sweden, while the other was placed where the G’psgolox Pole once stood. The poles were carved by Henry Robertson and his sisters sons Derek and Barry Wilson. The Haisla nation also build a historical preservation centre in the Kitimaat Village that would host the original pole.

In 2006, after 77 years at the museum, the pole arrived at the Kitimaat Village in British Columbia. In the shopping mall where it was placed, school children could listen to the elders telling the history of the pole. In 2012, the Kitlope Eagle clan chief decided to move the pole to an old graveyard close to the original location of the pole, where it was left to disintegrate.[10]

Oolichan fishing

Oolichan is a smelt fish that is so oily that the oil can be made to burn like a candle, hence they are also known as candlefish. For many West Coast Nations, the oolichan has been known as the saviour fish, representing fresh food after a long winter. Oolican grease was one of the most valuable resources to the Haisla, a valuable commodity for trading with other tribes.[12] The process of extracting the fat is to boil the oolichan in large cedar boxes until the grease separates from the meat and rises to the top. The fat is then skimmed off and poured into other containers for storage, to be traded later or eaten throughout the year.[13] Making Oolican oil/grease is very labour-intensive, and would often involve the entire tribe. Women were in charge of making the nets for catching oolichan. Nets were made from harvesting stinging nettles and spinning the fiber into twine. Knitting the intricate nets usually took about three months; when finished, they measured 50 feet long, and 24 feet wide at the mouth, narrowing to 2 feet.[14] When the oolichan nets were made with care, they could last more than 10 years.[14]

Potlatch and feasting

The potlatch began with the introduction of the mass production of goods within indigenous settlements along the Canadian Pacific coast, mainly British Columbia as well as some parts of the United States such as Oregon and Washington. The potlach word comes from the Chinook jargon that was mainly used for trading purposes in the villages along the Pacific coast of Canada, and it means to “give”.[15] The increases in wealth during this period increased the wealth of many individuals within the indigenous communities. Many individuals that had accumulated large amounts of wealth felt that by giving away their wealth they could gain a higher social status within their community. The potlatch is a ceremony that marks a feast that celebrates a special event such as redress family dishonor, funerals, births and marriage. Indigenous people along the Canadian and US Pacific coast have been practicing these rites for hundreds of years and these ceremonies often last a few days.[16] Historically, the potlatch was a very important social event for the Haisla people. The potlatch served to redistribute goods throughout the tribe. Giving away material wealth at a potlatch was the most significant way of maintaining and improving social standing.[16] These type of ceremonies are an important part of the indigenous culture and is not uncommon for the host indigenous nation of the potlatch to secure a loan so to accommodate for needs and necessities of their guests’ during the festivities. Some of the activities that take place during these ceremonies are: dancing, singing, storytelling and feasting. The purpose of these rituals is to get indigenous nations together, to build stronger social and cultural ties, for this reason, the hosts of the potlach usually give away most or all of their wealth as by doing so boosts their social status within their community and secures a place for them in their cultural social hierarchy. The potlatch requires so much material goods that often clans would need to work together in order to make and gather enough supplies to host a potlatch.[14]

Dances

Dances are normally performed during wintertime at great feasts and potlatches. The Haisla have a series of dances that they perform, which are ranked from the lowest to highest. The lowest dances are usually performed by younger members and commoners, while the higher dances are reserved for nobles and chiefs. Participants in the dance are recognized by the “five vertical streaks on both sides of the face”.[7] The three highest dances are secret, called hai'likula (a word meaning magical or shamanistic) and commoners are not permitted to know the details. Jesters are used to entertain the crowd as dancers would make their preparations behind a screen. They also will dance in select dances. The position of jester is hereditary via the matrilineal line. The preparation for the higher dances is reserved for nobleman and woman, as they are the only members of the tribe that are permitted to witness these preparations. Although noblewomen were not permitted to dance in the higher dances, they were involved in helping with the preparations.  These highest three dances also include the use of whistles and rattles, and the tone of the whistle is distinctive to the dance being performed. Members of the two highest dances are thought to possess magical powers.[7]

Series of Dances, starting with the lowest:

1) Mitla

This dance is usually performed by younger nobles and commoners into advanced years. Most adult nobleman would have long “graduated” from performing this dance, unless he is childless and / or unable to pass on the dance.

2) Glo'ala'ha ("came down a second time")

This dance, like the Mitla, is a common dance.

3) Ula'la

This is the highest of the common dances, and you must be a potential noble to dance. These participants are permitted to witness preparations for the higher dances. The dancers are usually sons of nobleman, who wish to begin preparing them for the higher dances.

4) Nutlåm

The Hisla people believe that this dance originated at Kemano with the (Kitlope) tribe. This is referred to the dog-eater dance, and participants adorn dog skulls when dancing. The number of skulls worn is determined by the number of dogs that the individual has killed and devoured. Historically, the Haisla people believed eating dog meat or human flesh was poisonous. Those who were able to ingest the meat and survive were seen as special.

5) Nu'ntlsista (means dizzy or crazy)

This dance is also referred to as the fire dance. It is considered the second most important dance to the Haisla people. In this dance, the dancers wear their hair matted and act crazy. If anyone in the audience smiles, laughs or speaks they are set upon by the dancers. To demonstrate their might, dancers will walk on hot coals. You must be a nobleman to participate in this dance.

6) Tanish

A Haihais word meaning cannibal or man-eater. The right to participate in the Tanish dance is by inheritance only, with a few exceptions such as a dowry gift. Women are not allowed to dance, but they help with preparations for this dance and act as attendants.

Language

The Haisla language is spoken by the descendants of the Gitamaat and Kitlope bands from the Kitimat area of the northern coast of British Columbia.[17] It is a Northern Wakashan language spoken by several hundred people, and is geographically the northernmost Wakashan language. Its nearest Wakashan neighbour is Oowekyala. Haisla is related to the other North Wakashan languages of Wuikyala, Heiltsuk, and Kwak'wala. It consists of two dialects, sometimes defined as sublanguages: Kitamaat and Kitlope (also known as X̣enaksialak’ala). Haisla names are written in a phonemic alphabet[18] that allows the language's sounds to be distinguished from that of other indigenous people. Several scientific alphabets have been used for writing Haisla, and a transcription system devised by Emmon Bach is used to be able to read the Haisla inscriptions.

In popular culture

  • The novel Monkey Beach, by Canadian author Eden Robinson, follows the lives of a Haisla teenager and her family.[19]
  • Son of a Trickster by Eden Robinson was released in 2017. This novel follows Jared through his grade 10 years in Kitimat and his first encounters with magic. The Canadian television series Trickster based on the novel premiered in 2020.
  • The Snotty Nose Rez Kids, a Hip Hop duo from the Haisla Nation, won the Juno Award for Indigenous Music Album of the Year in 2019.[20]

Notable people

References

  1. ^ "Home". haisla.ca.
  2. ^ "Haisla (Kitamaat)". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  3. ^ a b "About the Haisla". Haisla Nation. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  4. ^ Kundoque, Jacquie Green (2008). "Reclaiming Haisla Ways: Remembering Oolican Fishing". Canadian Journal of Native Education. 31: 11 – via Canadian Business and Current Affairs Database.
  5. ^ "Kitamaat Village Community Observatory | Ocean Networks Canada". www.oceannetworks.ca. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  6. ^ http://haisla.ca/news/latest-news-2/#iLightbox[gallery]/0[bare URL]
  7. ^ a b c d Olson, Ronald L. (1940). "The Social Organization of the Haisla of British Columbia". Anthropological Records. 2 (5): 169–185.
  8. ^ a b Kelm, Mary-Ellen (2006). The Letters of Margaret Butcher: Missionary-Imperialism on the North Pacific Coast. Calgary, Canada: University of Calgary Press. pp. xv. ISBN 1-55238-166-8.
  9. ^ "Aboriginal First Nations Native American Culture history spirituality traditions legends values repatriation protection". www.turtleisland.org. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  10. ^ a b Anders Björklund. "The case of Chief G'psgolox's totem pole « balticworlds.com". balticworlds.com. Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  11. ^ "G'psgolox Totem Pole – Haisla and Sweden and the Stockholm Museum of Ethnography — Centre du droit de l'art". plone.unige.ch. Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  12. ^ Government, Gingolx Village. "Ways of Life - Ancient Villages and Totem Poles of the Nisga'a". www.gingolx.ca. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  13. ^ "What is an "oolichan?"". Office for Science and Society. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  14. ^ a b c Robinson, Gordon (1965). Tales of Kitamaat. Kitimat, B.C: Northern Sentinel Press. pp. 39–40.
  15. ^ "The Potlatch Ceremony". Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  16. ^ a b "Potlatch | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  17. ^ "Culture". Haisla Nation. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  18. ^ phonemic alphabet
  19. ^ "Monkey Beach". CBC Books. CBC. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  20. ^ "2019 INDIGENOUS MUSIC ALBUM OF THE YEAR | Snotty Nose Rez Kids". The JUNO Awards. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  21. ^ Tepper, Leslie (2014). The Grand Hall: First Peoples of Canada's Northwest Coast. Library and Archives Canada. p. 55. ISBN 9780660202792.

External links

  • www.haisla.ca Haisla Nation website

haisla, people, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, bet. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Haisla people news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Haisla also known as Xa islak ala X a islakʼala X aʼislakʼala X aʼislak ala Xai sla are an amalgamation of two bands the Kitamaat people 2 of upper Douglas Channel and Devastation Channel and the Kitlope People of upper Princess Royal Channel and Gardner Canal in British Columbia Canada HaislaXa islak ala X a islakʼala X aʼislakʼala X aʼislak ala Xai slaA Haisla whistleTotal population1 500 1 Regions with significant populationsBritish ColumbiaLanguagesEnglish HaislaReligionNative Christianity Related ethnic groupsHeiltsuk Wuikinuxv KwakiutlThe Kitamaat call themselves Haisla dwellers downriver and the Kitlope Henaaksiala dying off slowly a reference to their traditional longevity The word Kitamaat comes from the Tsimshian people who originate from the Prince Rupert and Metlakatla areas While Kitamaat means people of the snow in Tsimshian kit means people and amaat refers to territory or place The Haisla are a group indigenous people that have lived at Kitamaat Village as their natural area of residence in the North Coast region of British Columbia and have occupied these lands for at least 9 000 years 3 Today the they are located in Kitamaat Village otherwise known as Kitimat Village Home to about half of the 1700 Haisla the village sits at the head of the Douglas Channel in British Columbia while most of the people live elsewhere in the Greater Vancouver region 3 Their language Haisla is named after them in most English usage though its actual name is X a islak ala The name Haisla is derived from the Haisla word x aʼisla or x aʼisela those living at the rivermouth living downriver Along with the neighbouring Wuikinuxv and Heiltsuk people they were incorrectly known in the past as the Northern Kwakiutl Contents 1 Naming 2 Location 3 Haisla clan system 4 G psgolox totem pole 5 Oolichan fishing 6 Potlatch and feasting 7 Dances 8 Language 9 In popular culture 10 Notable people 11 References 12 External linksNaming EditThe name Kitamaat became misrepresented in 1955 when Alcan Industries entered to build an aluminum smelter in their territory Attempting to bring a new face to the territory Alcan called it the town of the future and changed the spelling to Kitimat 4 The Haisla name for Kitamaat Village is Tsee Motsa Cʼimaucʼa meaning Snag Beach 5 Location EditKitamaat Village the Haisla reserve is a short 20 minute drive south of the town of Kitimat This town the site of the aluminum smelter of Alcan Incorporated is at the head of the Douglas Channel a 90 km 56 mi fjord that serves as saltwater corridor connecting the community the town and the port of Kitimat to the Pacific Ocean Kitamaat is a Tsimshian name applied by European explorers who asked their Tsimshian guides for the name of the place it means people of the snows or place of the snows For hundreds of years the Haisla people have occupied many village sites throughout their territory The government of the Haisla people is the Haisla Nation with its offices in Kitimaat Village Canoe made by the Haisla members of the Kitimat Athlete club It was donated as a gift to the UBC Museum of Anthropology in 1948 where it is displayed today Ellis Ross was a prominent elected Chief Councillor of the Haisla Nation and one of the first First Nations leaders in Canada to team up with big oil and liquified natural gas LNG companies He was full time councillor from 2003 to 2016 and was followed by 6 Crystal Smith the current Acting Chief Haisla clan system EditHistorically there were six clans within the Haisla people each named after an animal that had historical significance to the tribe It is believed that the sixth clan the Crow is nearly extinct and has merged with the Raven clan 7 Each tribe has its own principal chief Xay mas and they would meet whenever needed to discuss issues that would affect the entire tribe These clan chiefs were very involved in their members lives including arranging marriages that would benefit the clan distributing wealth and building alliances between clans The chiefs could take more than one wife and wives of deceased chiefs could also be inherited by the new chief 8 The Haisla people were some of the few northern North American indigenous nations that had a tiered class system consisting of noblemen commoners and slaves Nobleman had privileges that included participation in secret rituals and the authority to direct commoners and slaves in labour activities The nobility was recognized by their piercings earlobes for the boys and the lower lip for the girls Commoners were free to live as they would but couldn t participate in tribal governance Slaves were generally war prisoners were expected to be completely subservient and could be killed at will Clan membership is inherited maternally with titles and inheritance passing from uncle to nephew instead of the paternal father to son 8 It is believed that this clan system was inherited from the migration of Tsimshian women as they spread throughout the northern tribes Each clan has its own unique creation story in conjunction with the entire tribe s creation story 7 Eagle ai ǐksdukuyinihu from ai ĭksdukuya Crests eagle sea otter ermine owl shag hawk halibut Sometimes referred to as Owl Clan Clan cry call hai hai imitation of the eagle scream Beaver gĭtsǎ k Tsimshian kaulu n Haisla equivalent Crests beaver dorsal fin of a dogfish fireweed beavers house human figure holding its knees k yEk a n giant beaver posts or hat rings carved to look like beaver cuttings Sometimes referred to as the Dogfish Clan Clan cry call t am t am imitating a beaver hitting its tail on the water Raven giga k eni Crests raven asEwĕ lgit seated human figure with human faces carved or painted onto palms ears knees and feet head and beak of a raven gosEmdela h figure of a man that when Ravens host a feast is placed head down in the entrance way There is human hair added and as the raven chief enters the feast the hair will touch him Clan cry call Gax gax Sound of raven croaking Blackfish Killer Whale Orca ha laxaini Crests blackfish dorsal fin or a blackfish grizzly bear twilight red sky of the evening human figure with another human figure at its breast walai gĭtlah giant deep sea bear sa nis kelp heads bu sbakah type of sea plant bŭgwi s and bŭgwa s Merman and mermaid resembling humans or monkeys mountain goat with only one horn fireweed Sometimes referred to as Grizzly Bear Clan Clan cry call hŏc hŏc Imitating the blow hole of an orca G psgolox totem pole EditMain article G psgolox totem pole The G psgolox totem pole is attached with a legend It is told that in 1872 a smallpox epidemic infected the people the Haisla Nation located in the north of what we now call British Columbia killing the vast majority of inhabitants The leader of the Eagle Clan of the Haisla tribe named Chief G psgolox lost his whole family due to the epidemic as well as many of his friends The legend tells that the bereaved Chief G spgolox travelled to the forest and attempted to find help there In the legend he met with the spirits Tsooda and Zola who told the Chief to go to the edge of a mountain at dawn where he would see his deceased loved ones and learn to heal those still living In the legend this is how Chief G psgolox complied and gained vital knowledge learning the nature of the spirits the Haisla spirit of continuance and transition In appreciation of the spirits help Chief G spgolox commissioned a nine meter tall totem pole with three figures The bottom two figures commemorate the deceased and the top figure represents the Tsooda spirit 9 The pole while commemorating the dead told the tale of Haisla survival It later became known as The G psgolox Pole In 1928 Olof Hanson the Swedish vice president to British Columbia summited a request to the Canadian Department of Indian Affairs to acquire a pole and in 1929 Olof was granted permission to cut down a totem pole and take it to Sweden Olof Hanson chose the G spgolox totem pole and cut it at the base Olof Hanson took the pole while the Haisla were away due to seasonal living patterns leaving the Haisla confused and wondering what had happened to the pole The Norwegian emigrant named Iver Fougner 1870 1947 who chopped down the pole was employed as an Indian agent He was a contact person between the authorities and Indigenous peoples in the vast district 10 Olof donated the G psgolox Pole to the Swedish National Museum of Ethnography that same year The museum had the pole in storage for many years until they had a proper building to display it in 1980 The pole was on display in this building for 25 years When some members of the Haisla Nation heard rumours that the pole may have been up for display in Sweden it was decided that Louisa Smith and Gerald Amos should travel to Sweden to investigate the rumours Once they had confirmed that the pole in display was the G psgolox Pole the Haisla nation asked for its repatriation In 1992 a member of the Museum of Ethnography travelled to the Haisla village in British Columbia where he was told by the Haisla people that the pole was stolen from them and that they had been avidly searching for it without success since the theft in 1929 He was also told that since the pole was found it had to be returned to its rightful owners The Haisla people offered to carve an identical totem replica in exchange for the original 11 The museum agreed to the proposal by the Haisla people This led to the Swedish government granting permission for the museum to gift the totem pole to the Haisla people in 1994 with the condition that the replica be an exact match to the original In 2000 the Haisla community completed two replicas of the pole One of the replicas were given to Sweden while the other was placed where the G psgolox Pole once stood The poles were carved by Henry Robertson and his sisters sons Derek and Barry Wilson The Haisla nation also build a historical preservation centre in the Kitimaat Village that would host the original pole In 2006 after 77 years at the museum the pole arrived at the Kitimaat Village in British Columbia In the shopping mall where it was placed school children could listen to the elders telling the history of the pole In 2012 the Kitlope Eagle clan chief decided to move the pole to an old graveyard close to the original location of the pole where it was left to disintegrate 10 Oolichan fishing EditOolichan is a smelt fish that is so oily that the oil can be made to burn like a candle hence they are also known as candlefish For many West Coast Nations the oolichan has been known as the saviour fish representing fresh food after a long winter Oolican grease was one of the most valuable resources to the Haisla a valuable commodity for trading with other tribes 12 The process of extracting the fat is to boil the oolichan in large cedar boxes until the grease separates from the meat and rises to the top The fat is then skimmed off and poured into other containers for storage to be traded later or eaten throughout the year 13 Making Oolican oil grease is very labour intensive and would often involve the entire tribe Women were in charge of making the nets for catching oolichan Nets were made from harvesting stinging nettles and spinning the fiber into twine Knitting the intricate nets usually took about three months when finished they measured 50 feet long and 24 feet wide at the mouth narrowing to 2 feet 14 When the oolichan nets were made with care they could last more than 10 years 14 Potlatch and feasting EditThe potlatch began with the introduction of the mass production of goods within indigenous settlements along the Canadian Pacific coast mainly British Columbia as well as some parts of the United States such as Oregon and Washington The potlach word comes from the Chinook jargon that was mainly used for trading purposes in the villages along the Pacific coast of Canada and it means to give 15 The increases in wealth during this period increased the wealth of many individuals within the indigenous communities Many individuals that had accumulated large amounts of wealth felt that by giving away their wealth they could gain a higher social status within their community The potlatch is a ceremony that marks a feast that celebrates a special event such as redress family dishonor funerals births and marriage Indigenous people along the Canadian and US Pacific coast have been practicing these rites for hundreds of years and these ceremonies often last a few days 16 Historically the potlatch was a very important social event for the Haisla people The potlatch served to redistribute goods throughout the tribe Giving away material wealth at a potlatch was the most significant way of maintaining and improving social standing 16 These type of ceremonies are an important part of the indigenous culture and is not uncommon for the host indigenous nation of the potlatch to secure a loan so to accommodate for needs and necessities of their guests during the festivities Some of the activities that take place during these ceremonies are dancing singing storytelling and feasting The purpose of these rituals is to get indigenous nations together to build stronger social and cultural ties for this reason the hosts of the potlach usually give away most or all of their wealth as by doing so boosts their social status within their community and secures a place for them in their cultural social hierarchy The potlatch requires so much material goods that often clans would need to work together in order to make and gather enough supplies to host a potlatch 14 Dances EditDances are normally performed during wintertime at great feasts and potlatches The Haisla have a series of dances that they perform which are ranked from the lowest to highest The lowest dances are usually performed by younger members and commoners while the higher dances are reserved for nobles and chiefs Participants in the dance are recognized by the five vertical streaks on both sides of the face 7 The three highest dances are secret called hai likula a word meaning magical or shamanistic and commoners are not permitted to know the details Jesters are used to entertain the crowd as dancers would make their preparations behind a screen They also will dance in select dances The position of jester is hereditary via the matrilineal line The preparation for the higher dances is reserved for nobleman and woman as they are the only members of the tribe that are permitted to witness these preparations Although noblewomen were not permitted to dance in the higher dances they were involved in helping with the preparations These highest three dances also include the use of whistles and rattles and the tone of the whistle is distinctive to the dance being performed Members of the two highest dances are thought to possess magical powers 7 Series of Dances starting with the lowest 1 MitlaThis dance is usually performed by younger nobles and commoners into advanced years Most adult nobleman would have long graduated from performing this dance unless he is childless and or unable to pass on the dance 2 Glo ala ha came down a second time This dance like the Mitla is a common dance 3 Ula laThis is the highest of the common dances and you must be a potential noble to dance These participants are permitted to witness preparations for the higher dances The dancers are usually sons of nobleman who wish to begin preparing them for the higher dances 4 NutlamThe Hisla people believe that this dance originated at Kemano with the Kitlope tribe This is referred to the dog eater dance and participants adorn dog skulls when dancing The number of skulls worn is determined by the number of dogs that the individual has killed and devoured Historically the Haisla people believed eating dog meat or human flesh was poisonous Those who were able to ingest the meat and survive were seen as special 5 Nu ntlsista means dizzy or crazy This dance is also referred to as the fire dance It is considered the second most important dance to the Haisla people In this dance the dancers wear their hair matted and act crazy If anyone in the audience smiles laughs or speaks they are set upon by the dancers To demonstrate their might dancers will walk on hot coals You must be a nobleman to participate in this dance 6 TanishA Haihais word meaning cannibal or man eater The right to participate in the Tanish dance is by inheritance only with a few exceptions such as a dowry gift Women are not allowed to dance but they help with preparations for this dance and act as attendants Language EditMain article Haisla language The Haisla language is spoken by the descendants of the Gitamaat and Kitlope bands from the Kitimat area of the northern coast of British Columbia 17 It is a Northern Wakashan language spoken by several hundred people and is geographically the northernmost Wakashan language Its nearest Wakashan neighbour is Oowekyala Haisla is related to the other North Wakashan languages of Wuikyala Heiltsuk and Kwak wala It consists of two dialects sometimes defined as sublanguages Kitamaat and Kitlope also known as X enaksialak ala Haisla names are written in a phonemic alphabet 18 that allows the language s sounds to be distinguished from that of other indigenous people Several scientific alphabets have been used for writing Haisla and a transcription system devised by Emmon Bach is used to be able to read the Haisla inscriptions In popular culture EditThe novel Monkey Beach by Canadian author Eden Robinson follows the lives of a Haisla teenager and her family 19 Son of a Trickster by Eden Robinson was released in 2017 This novel follows Jared through his grade 10 years in Kitimat and his first encounters with magic The Canadian television series Trickster based on the novel premiered in 2020 The Snotty Nose Rez Kids a Hip Hop duo from the Haisla Nation won the Juno Award for Indigenous Music Album of the Year in 2019 20 Notable people EditBarry Wilson born 1952 artist 21 References Edit Home haisla ca Haisla Kitamaat www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved 2023 04 14 a b About the Haisla Haisla Nation Retrieved 2019 02 23 Kundoque Jacquie Green 2008 Reclaiming Haisla Ways Remembering Oolican Fishing Canadian Journal of Native Education 31 11 via Canadian Business and Current Affairs Database Kitamaat Village Community Observatory Ocean Networks Canada www oceannetworks ca Retrieved 2019 02 23 http haisla ca news latest news 2 iLightbox gallery 0 bare URL a b c d Olson Ronald L 1940 The Social Organization of the Haisla of British Columbia Anthropological Records 2 5 169 185 a b Kelm Mary Ellen 2006 The Letters of Margaret Butcher Missionary Imperialism on the North Pacific Coast Calgary Canada University of Calgary Press pp xv ISBN 1 55238 166 8 Aboriginal First Nations Native American Culture history spirituality traditions legends values repatriation protection www turtleisland org Retrieved 2019 03 31 a b Anders Bjorklund The case of Chief G psgolox s totem pole balticworlds com balticworlds com Retrieved 2023 02 17 G psgolox Totem Pole Haisla and Sweden and the Stockholm Museum of Ethnography Centre du droit de l art plone unige ch Retrieved 2023 02 17 Government Gingolx Village Ways of Life Ancient Villages and Totem Poles of the Nisga a www gingolx ca Retrieved 2019 03 31 What is an oolichan Office for Science and Society Retrieved 2019 03 31 a b c Robinson Gordon 1965 Tales of Kitamaat Kitimat B C Northern Sentinel Press pp 39 40 The Potlatch Ceremony Retrieved 2019 03 31 a b Potlatch The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved 2019 03 31 Culture Haisla Nation Retrieved 2019 02 23 phonemic alphabet Monkey Beach CBC Books CBC Retrieved 2 February 2016 2019 INDIGENOUS MUSIC ALBUM OF THE YEAR Snotty Nose Rez Kids The JUNO Awards Retrieved 2019 03 31 Tepper Leslie 2014 The Grand Hall First Peoples of Canada s Northwest Coast Library and Archives Canada p 55 ISBN 9780660202792 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haisla www haisla ca Haisla Nation website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haisla people amp oldid 1149761116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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