Sisiutl

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File:Sisiutl mask.jpg
A Kwakwaka'wakw Sisiutl dance mask made of cedar by Oscar Matilpi.

The Sisiutl (Si’sEyuL)[citation needed] is one of the most powerful crests, and mythological creatures in the mythology of the Kwakwaka’wakw, Nuu-chah-nulth, Squamish, Nuxalkmc and various other Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast, and figures prominently in their art, dances and songs. Sisiutl is the god of warrior invincibility,[citation needed] a magic war-canoe that can go underground (Winalagalis),[citation needed] and guardian of the house of the sky people.[citation needed]

Form

Sisiutl are frequently depicted as a two headed sea serpent or snake with a humanoid head (and hands) in the middle of the body.[citation needed] All three heads are surmounted by "horns of power" (also seen on thunderbirds).[citation needed]

NWC whalers told of a powerful whaling charm, a black two headed “worm.”[citation needed]

According to Boas the word for sisiutl in Tsimshian is "Laqaqua'sa" [literally "both sides head"] (Boas, "Vocabularies of the Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian" 1891). The soulcatcher (Haboolm Ksinaalgat) of the northern Tsimshian, Tlingit, and Haida peoples exhibits the same body form, and may derive its form from the sisiutl.[citation needed]

Powers

The humanoid central head likely symbolizes Sisiutl’s supernatural shape-shifting powers (most commonly transforming into human form, a self-propelled canoe, or salmon).[citation needed] Sisiutl could also change size from a few centimeters (form of a woodworm), to a span sufficient to block off a bay.[citation needed] As a transformative creature of vast shamanic power, the Sisiutl could travel in and across all boundaries (worlds): land, water, & air.[citation needed] There is a belief among the Coast Salish that Sisiutl employ orca for transportation.[citation needed]

So powerful are Sisiutl, that contact, stepping on one’s slime trail, or even seeing one, was believed to cause sickness or death.[citation needed] According to legend, looking at the sisiutl can turn a person into stone.[citation needed] However, if one kills a Sisiutl, it has healing powers.[citation needed]

Usage

Artifacts commonly adorned with Sisiutl include masks, “flying" props, power boards (dance boards), totem poles, clubs, knives, whistles, house beams, button blankets, setee, drums, wooden belts, pectoral ornaments, headdresses, frontlets, feast bowls, and canoe decorations.

Images or sculptures of Sisiutl were employed to guard canoes and cedar plank longhouses (the Sisiutl sculpture guarding one such house was said to flick its tongues as people approached). Warriors traditionally wear the sisiutl's emblem for protection in battle.[citation needed]

File:Sisiutl dance board.jpg
"Dantsikw" power boards, summoned by Tuxw'id dancers. Dantsikw boards are abstract Sisiutl.

Enemies

Thunderbirds are one of the few predators of Sisiutl. Holly, and spat blood were some of the few implements able to harm a Sisiutl.[citation needed]

Associations

Sisiutl are associated with the salmon (one of Sisiutl’s forms), Winalagilis (warrior spirit), the Sun (“Counselor of the World” steals the Sun’s Sisiutl mask, releasing daylight to the world in one Kwakwaka’wakw myth), the moon, Land-Otter Canoe, woodworm, house of the sky people (Sisiutl guards it).[citation needed] A Sisiutl also guards the house of the Dzunukwa.[citation needed]

Ceremony

Dancers donning the mask of Sisiutl adorn themselves with western hemlock boughs, signifying wildness. Sisiutl masks were often hinged, allowing the serpent ends to simulate lifelike serpentine writhing movements. Sisiutl masks were decorated with flecks of mica, which were believed to be scales shed by Sisiutl (often found on beaches). These mica chips provided an enchanting glittery effect when danced in fire-light.[citation needed]

Tuxw'id (female warrior) dancers often incorporate Sisiutl in their performance, invoking Sisiutl to grant them the power of Winalagalis (warrior spirit): invincibility and immunity from pain. They may be seemingly pulled underground by a Sisiutl, or demonstrate their power by summoning dantsikw (sisiutl) power boards to rise from the earth commemorating the supernatural canoe of Winalagalis (a copper Sisiutl canoe that can travel underground). Supernatural powers bestowed by Sisiutl might be theatrically demonstrated by 'miraculously' surviving burning alive, or being decapitated.[citation needed]

In the Hawinalal, to demonstrate invincibility & immunity from pain, dancers don sisiutl girdles, and are suspended from the rafters of the plank house by skewers pierced through their backs and thighs. Hawinalal dancers also cut themselves with a sisiutl knife. (Boas, "Social Organization...", p. 485).

The Ha'mshamtses ("Eaters-of-the-Ground": secret cannibal society akin to Hamatsa) employs sisiutl transformation masks.[citation needed]

The ME'ila dancer (commemorates a boy who brought back magical treasures from the house of the moon, then remained to live there) carries a sisiutl club.[citation needed]

Gallery

See also

References

  • Boas, Franz. "Kwakiutl Ethnography." 1966. University of Chicago Press. London.
  • Jonaitis, Aldona, ed. ."Chiefly Feasts: The Enduring Kwkaiutl Potltach." 1991. AMHH. Seattle.

External links