List of S.A characters and Haida people: Difference between pages

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{{otheruses4|the people|their government|Council of the Haida Nation|the [[Tribal class destroyer (1936)|tribal class]] ship of the [[RCN|Canadian Navy]]|HMCS Haida (G63)}}
The following is a '''list of characters from the series, [[Special A]]'''.
{{Citations missing|date=October 2007}}


{{Infobox Ethnic group
''Note: Names are all in Western order (given name before surname).''
|group=Haida morganism
|image=[[Image:Saaduuts 02A.jpg|200 px]]
|image_caption=Haida carver Saaduuts, 2007
|poptime=c. 2,000<ref name="ethnologue">Ethnologue. (2005). [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=91173 "Language Family Trees: Na-Dene, Haida."] In Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (ed.), ''Ethnologue: Languages of the World'', 15th ed. Dallas, TX: SIL International. Online (2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-01. Follow links for ethnic population figures, as follows: Northern Haida — 1,700 (1,100 in Canada, 600 in US); Southern Haida — 500 (all in Canada).</ref>
|popplace={{flagicon|Canada}} '''[[Canada]]'''<br>({{flagicon|British Columbia}} [[British Columbia]])<br><br>{{flagicon|USA}} '''[[United States]]'''<br>({{flagicon|Alaska}} [[Alaska]])
|langs=[[English language|English]], [[Haida language|Haida]]
}}
The '''Haida''' (19th C.-early 20th C.) [[Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast|Indigenous]] nation of the west coast of [[North America]]. The Haida territories comprise the archipelago of the [[Queen Charlotte Islands]], Shoeakawooo("land of the Haida"), and including part of [[Prince of Wales Island (Alaska)|Prince of Wales Island]] in the southernmost [[Alaska Panhandle]], which is the home of a subgroup called the '''Kaigani Haida'''. The term "Haida Nation" can and does refer to both the people and their government, the [[Council of the Haida Nation]]. Their ancestral language is the [[Haida language]], which has never been adequately classified by linguists because of its uniqueness.<ref name="Schoonmaker">{{cite book | last = Schoonmaker| first = Peter K. | coauthors = Bettina Von Hagen, Edward C. Wolf | title = The Rain Forests of Home: Profile Of A North American Bioregion | publisher = Island Press | date = 1997 | pages = 257 | id = ISBN 1559634804}}</ref> In addition to those Haida residing in the Queen Charlottes and Alaska, there are also many Haidas in various urban areas in the western United States and Canada.


Haida society continues to be much engaged in the production of a robust and highly stylized art form. While frequently expressed in large wooden carvings [[totem poles]] or ornate jewelery it is also moving quickly into the work of populist expression such as [[Haida manga]].
==Special A Students==
===Hikari Hanazono===
;{{nihongo||華園 光|Hanazono Hikari}} {{anime voices|Yuko Goto|}}
*Nicknames: ''Number Two''
*Birthday: March 20
*Blood Type: O
*Height: 155 cm
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Older Brother
*Favorite Food: Rice balls


==History==
Hikari is the protagonist of the story. She holds the 2nd position in school for having the best grades. Self-proclaimed as Kei Takishima's greatest competitor, she is determined to beat him in any kind of competition. Stubborn, proud and hot-headed, Hikari never backs down from a challenge, especially one from Kei, because she is constantly looking for an opportunity to surpass him, though has never done so. A kind girl who always worries about others, Hikari sometimes lacks [[common sense]]. She is good at sports and academics, but she is very bad at teaching, cooking, and sewing (any other domestic work). Although she can handle her own in a fight (often against boys), Kei, nonetheless, gets irritated whenever she puts herself in danger. Although Hikari is rather sensitive to others, she is quite dense when it comes to love. She is oblivious to the romantic feelings Kei has for her, though everyone else knows that Kei is in love with her. In volume four Hikari begins to fall in love with Kei, though she does not realize it until volume six.
[[Image:haida villagesite.jpg|thumb|Site of the former Haida village [[SGang Gwaay Llanagaay]]]]
Haidas were traditionally known as ruthless warriors and [[slave traders]], raiding as far as California. Haida oral narratives record journeys as far north as the [[Bering Sea]], and one account implies that even [[Asia]] was visited by Haidas before Europeans entered the Pacific. The Haida's ability to travel was dependent upon a supply of ancient [[Thuja plicata|Western Red cedar]] trees that were carved and shaped into their famous [[Pacific Northwest Canoes]]. Carved from a single red cedar tree, a vessel could sleep 15 adults head to toe, and was propelled by up to 60 paddlers (who often included women). In the event of a battle at sea, paddlers were armed with heavy stone rings (18 to 23 kg) attached to woven tree root or bark ropes. These devices, are thrown at enemy canoes, inflicting substantial damage. Haida warriors entered battle with red cedar armor, wooden shields, stone maces and [[atlatl]]s. War helmets were carved. These techniques are unknown to anyone other than the Haida people as they have kept it secret for many years. It is still unknown how the Haida would carve their war helmets and how they looked.


The Haida were feared along the coast because of their practice of making lightning raids against which their enemies had little defense, a similar tactic used by [[Imperial Japan]] during World War 2 & also by [[Genghis Khan]] , during the rise of the [[Mongol Empire]]. Their great skills of seamanship, their superior craft and their relative protection from retaliation in their island fortress added to the aggressive posture of the Haida towards neighboring tribes. Diamond Jenness, an early anthropologist at the [[Canadian Museum of Civilization]], caught their essence in his description of the Haida as the "Indian [[Vikings]] of the North West Coast".
===Kei Takishima===
;{{nihongo||滝島 彗|Takishima Kei}} {{anime voices|Jun Fukuyama|}}
*Birthday: November 22
*Blood Type: A
*Height: 175 cm
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Younger Brother Sui
*Favorite Food: Anything that Hikari makes no matter how disgusting it is


<blockquote>''Those were stirring times, about a century ago, when the big Haida war canoes, each hollowed out of a single cedar tree and manned by fifty or sixty warriors, traded and raided up and down the coast from [[Sitka]] in the north to the delta of the [[Fraser River]] in the south. Each usually carried a [[shaman]] or [[medicine man]] to catch and destroy the souls of enemies before an impending battle; and the women who sometimes accompanied the warriors fought as savagely as their husbands.'' </blockquote>
Ranked first in school for having the best grades, Kei is the son of the CEO of Takishima Corporation. As Hikari's undefeated rival, he likes to refer to her as "Number Two", which never fails to provoke her. He has a photographic memory and the ability to do anything right on his first try. He usually prefers to do things on his own until Hikari shows him how much fun it can be to work together with others. Kei loves Hikari, a fact that he does not deny, and has loved her since they were children. However, he has not confessed his love to her because he knows that Hikari does not understand those feelings and would think that he is referring to a love between friends. Although he is stoic most of the time and always maintains a calm facade, things involving Hikari can bring intense anxiety out of him. It always bothers him whenever Hikari pushes herself too hard or causes trouble, but her strong will and determination are the reasons why he admires and respects her.


The Haida went to war to acquire objects of wealth, such as coppers and [[Chilkat blanket]]s, that were in short supply on the islands, but primarily for slaves, who enhanced their productivity or were traded to other tribes. High-ranking captives were also the source of other property received in ransom such as crest designs, dances and songs.
===Jun Yamamoto===
;{{nihongo||山本 純|Yamamoto Jun}} {{anime voices|Tsubasa Yonaga|}}
*Birthday: February 14
*Blood Type: AB
*Height: 167 cm
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Older Sister
*Favorite Food: Salad that has [[arugula]] in it


Even prehistorically, the Haida engaged in sea battles.{{Fact|date=April 2008}}<!--"prehistorically" is the problem word, pre-Contact is meant--> They tied cedar bark ropes to heavy stone rings that were hurled to smash enemy canoes and that could quickly be retrieved for subsequent throws. A stone weighing 18 to 23 kg (40 to 50 pounds) could shatter the side of a dugout canoe and cause it to founder. Most tribes avoided sea battles with the Haida and tried to lure them ashore for a more equitable fight. The [[Tsimshian]] developed a signal-fire system to alert their villages on the [[Skeena River]] as soon as Haida invaders reached the mainland.
Jun is ranked 3rd in school and is Megumi's younger twin brother. The son of a music producer and a talented singer, Jun loves music more than anything else, but ironically has little talent for music. He is usually nice, quiet, kindhearted, innocent and sweet, but he has a [[split personality]] which he has concealed from everyone except Megumi and Ryuu. Triggered whenever he is kissed by a girl or receives a lot of affection, he becomes a bad boy, which is the complete opposite of his true self, and becomes irresistible to nearly all women. His split personality resulted from an hypnotism program that Jun watched as a child and first emerged when he was still in grade six. During a date with a girl, he changed and all the other girls around him became mesmerized by him; this led the girl Jun was dating to hate him and call him disgusting. The only thing that can bring him back to his original self is Megumi's horrible singing voice.


The incidence of warfare was undoubtedly accelerated in the half century from 1780 to 1830, when the Haida had no effective enemies except the many European and American traders on their shores who would rather trade than fight.{{Fact|date=April 2008}} During this period, the Haida successfully captured more than half a dozen ships. One was the ship Eleanora, taken by chiefs of the village of Skungwai (or [[Ninstints]]) in retaliation for the maltreatment Chief Koyah had received from its captain. An even more spectacular event was the capture of the ship ''[[Susan Sturgis]]'' by Chief [[Weah]] (Matthews) of [[Masset]] and the rescue of its crew by [[Albert Edward Edenshaw]].
===Megumi Yamamoto===
;{{nihongo||山本 芽|Yamamoto Megumi}} {{anime voices|Ayahi Takagaki|}}
*Birthday: February 14
*Blood Type: AB
*Height: 152 cm
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Younger Brother
*Favorite Food: Strawberry, throat drops


In such conflicts, the Haida quickly learned the newcomers' fighting tactics, which they used to good effect in subsequent battles, as Jacob Brink notes:
Megumi is ranked 4th in school and is Jun's older twin sister. She is the daughter of a famous vocalist and music producer and shares her brother's love of music, but, like Jun, she does not possess any musical talent at all. A cute and nice girl who rarely joins in disputes, Megumi is always quiet and refuses to speak because she wants to save her voice for singing. She usually writes on a sketchpad to communicate with others, but will speak when deeply upset (usually in the form of a shout), which can generally have devastating after-effects. She rarely speaks to people normally on a consistent basis with the exception of Yahiro, who encourages her to sing. Although her singing usually has disastrous effects, Yahiro theorizes that she probably sings very well, but that it needs to be in an open area and at a great distance - eventually demonstrating that she has an amazingly beautiful voice. While he had initially ordered her to during a "game" in which she was trying to make him happy, she eventually begins to do so under her own volition and gradually develops feelings for him. Like Jun, she is very close to Ryuu; she can be fiercely protective of them both, and thinks of Ryuu as much of her family as her brother. Megumi also happens to be bad at sports and dislikes them.


<blockquote>''As early as 1795, a British trading ship fired its cannons at a village in the central part of the archipelago because some of the crew had been killed by the inhabitants, and the survivors had to put hastily to sea when the Indians fired back at them. They found out later that the Indians had used a cannon and ammunition pilfered from an American Schooner a few years earlier.'' </blockquote>
===Tadashi Karino===
;{{nihongo||狩野 宙|Karino Tadashi}} {{anime voices|Hiro Shimono|}}
*Birthday: September 9
*Blood Type: B
*Height: 169 cm
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Grandfather
*Favorite Food: Anything sweet (especially food made by Akira)


Swivel guns were added to many Haida war canoes, although initially the recoil on discharge caused the hulls of many craft to split.
Innocent and carefree, Tadashi is ranked 5th in school. His mother, a fierce and intimidating woman, is the director of the school and the primary reason why he is in the SA; she told him he would be allowed to do whatever he wanted if he became a member of the SA. He suffers from [[wanderlust]] and frequently likes to vanish on some journey and return later for special school events. Tadashi is smarter than he looks and acts, though is usually the character who is most often comically attacked (frequently by Akira and Kei) because of his careless comments or reckless behavior. He loves Akira, but often makes rude, weird, stupid or inappropriate comments that provoke her to beat him up. Tadashi also seems to enjoy playing with puppets, is fond of Akira's cooking, and appears to like being beaten up by her.


Fortified sites were part of the defensive strategy of all Northwest Coast groups for at least 2,000 years. Captain [[James Cook]] was so impressed with one Haida fort off the west coast of [[Graham Island]] that he called it [[Hippah Island]] after the [[Maori]] forts he had seen in [[New Zealand]]. Military defences at Haida forts included stout palisades, rolling top-log defences, heavy trapdoors and fighting platforms supplied with stores of large boulders to hurl at invaders.
===Akira Toudou===
;{{nihongo||東堂 明|Toudou Akira}} {{anime voices|Hitomi Nabatame|}}
*Birthday: April 19
*Blood Type: B
*Height: 159 cm
*Family Composition: Father, Mother
*Favorite Food: Croissants, chocolate creamed desserts, egg tarts


===1774 and after===
Akira holds the 6th position in school and is the daughter of the owner of an airline company. She is very fond of Hikari and cute girls. Akira is very enthusiastic about her [[afternoon tea]], and has even constructed her own kitchen on campus. Akira apparently loves Tadashi, but never seems to hold back when hitting him for teasing her. In chapter 37 she finally confesses to him, and he tells her that he returns her feelings.


The archipelago was visited in 1776 by [[Juan José Pérez Hernández|Juan Pérez]] (at [[Langara Island]]) and in 1778 by Captain [[James Cook]]. In 1787 the islands were surveyed by Captain [[George Dixon (Royal Navy officer)|George Dixon]]. The islands were named by Captain Dixon after one of his ships, the [[Queen Charlotte merchant ship|Queen Charlotte]], which was named after [[Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz|the wife]] of [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George]]. The first fur trader ships arrived in 1774. The hunting of [[sea otter]] in Haida Gwaay serviced an international trading circuit: ships leaving the islands brought the pelts to China where they were traded for oriental goods; the ships then returned to the west, selling their cargo for substantial profit. Within a century, sea otter were in danger of extinction.
Because of Akira's parents, she often played with Kei and Yahiro during her childhood days. She was surrounded by the most powerful people in kindergarten, so nobody dared to approach her, since the two are very protective. She used to envy all the other girls who were able to play freely. She was good friends with Yahiro as a child, but due to a misunderstanding resulting from Yahiro's protective and somewhat selfish behavior, she avoids him whenever possible. Her dislike of him stems from Yahiro causing her childhood friend Sayo to despise her when her family had to move away; since Yahiro never told her that he had discovered Sayo had only befriended Akira because she was rich in order to protect her, Akira continues to blame Yahiro for the loss of Sayo. She eventually accepts him as one of her friends again, though does not reciprocate Yahiro's feelings for her.


===Ryuu Tsuji===
===European diseases===
[[Image:Poblacion Haida.PNG|thumb|Chart of the decimated and rebounding population of Haida from the Queen Charlotte Islands and Kaigani Haida from Prince of Wales Island]]European-introduced diseases consisted of smallpox, measles, venereal disease, influenza and others. At the time of colonial contact, Haida Gwaay's population was roughly 10,000-12,000 people residing in several dozen towns (many of them slaves from other tribes). During the 1800s, [[smallpox]] reduced the population by ninety percent; other diseases arrived as well, including [[typhoid]], [[measles]], and [[syphilis]], affecting more. The worst single smallpox outbreak occurred in the BC-wide [[smallpox epidemic of 1862]], when the population fell by more than half. [[E.O.S. Scholefield]] and [[F.W. Howay]] in their 1914 book ''British Columbia: From the Earliest Times to the Present'', give a population figure of 2,000 in 1879 in comparison to an 1840 <!--fur company?-->census figure of 8,328.<ref>[http://www.nosracines.ca/e/page.aspx?id=3621317 E.O.S. Scholefield & F.W. Howay, ''British Columbia: From the Earliest Times to the Present, Vol I'', publ. 1914]</ref> In 1900, 700 people remained.<!--S&H give the same number for 1914--> In keeping with an inclination to maintain multiple or seasonal communities, a number of wintering towns were consolidated into two primary settlements, [[Skidegate]] and Masset. Some 4000 people live on the islands today<!--how many of these are Haida?-->. Indigenous people (Haida) live throughout the islands, and maintain two exclusive communities in [[Skidegate, British Columbia|Skidegate]] and [[Masset, British Columbia|Old Masset]], each with a population of around 1000 people.Haida probably account for close to 50% of the current island population.
;{{nihongo||辻 竜|Tsuji Ryuu}} {{anime voices|Kazuma Horie|}}
*Birthday: May 4
*Blood Type: A
*Height: 186 cm
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Older Sister
*Favorite Food: Anything spicy


==Villages==
Ryuu holds the 7th position in school, although his test scores are a poor reflection of his intellectual prowess. He is in 7th place mainly because of the twins - Megumi tends to fall asleep and Jun becomes bored during the test, which results in Ryuu focusing the part of his attention on them instead of his own exam. He has been close to Megumi and Jun since they were very young; it is evident that he cares for the twins very much and that the three of them see each other as family. An even-tempered and kindhearted person, Ryuu loves animals and is good with children. He is also the first amongst the S.A to discover Finn's real gender, a secret that few people in the world know, and appears to be developing feelings for her. He is the son of the CEO of a sports company and one of his family's clients is Yahiro's family.


Historical Haida villages were<ref>[http://www.civilization.ca/aborig/haida/havhg01e.html Canadian Museum of Civilization webpage on Haida villages]</ref>:
==Takishima Family==
*[[Kiusta]]
===Sui Takishima===
*[[Kung (Haida village)|Kung]]
;{{nihongo||滝島 翠|Takishima Sui}} {{anime voices|Kaori Shimizu|}}
*[[Yan (Haida village)|Yan]]
*Nickname: ''Little Takishima''
*[[Kayung]]
*[[Masset, British Columbia|Masset]]The name Masset, received from pre British contact between Haidas and the Spanish actually includes three separate and adjoining communities, Atewaas (white slope town), Jaahguhl and Kayung
*[[Hiellan]]
*[[Skidegate, British Columbia|Skidegate]] ([[Graham Island]])
*[[Cha'atl]]
*[[Haina (Haida village)|Haina]]
*[[Kaisun (Haida village)|Kaisun]]<!--see [[Kaysun]] re eventually dab/redirect-->
*[[Cumshewa, British Columbia|Cumshewa]] ([[Moresby Island]])
*[[Skedans]] aka Koona or Q'una.
*[[Tanu (Haida village)|Tanu]] ([[New Clew, British Columbia|New Clew)]], [[Louise Island]]
*[[Ninstints]] (Sgang Gway, aka [[Anthony Island]])
*[[Hlk'yah GaawGa]] (Windy Bay) ([[Lyell Island]])<ref>[http://www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/bc/gwaiihaanas/edu/edu1d_E.asp Parks Canada website]</ref>
s*[[Klinkwan]] ([[Kaigani Haida]], [[Prince of Wales Island]])
*[[Sukkwan]] ([[Kaigani Haida]], [[Prince of Wales Island]])
*[[Howkan]] ([[Kaigani Haida]], [[Prince of Wales Island]])
*[[Kasaan]] ([[Kaigani Haida]], [[Prince of Wales Island]])


==Calendar==
Sui is Kei's younger brother and resembles a younger version of Kei. Initially, he dislikes Kei because he finds living with him disgusting and thinks of him as a robot wearing human skin. Because Sui feels very inferior to his brother, who is good at everything, he believes that he cannot reach Kei's level and he refuses to take his studies seriously. However, when he sees that even his "perfect" brother can become desperate and caring, Sui develops a huge brother complex. Sui likes to call Hikari "Stupid Girl", but approaches her frequently when he thinks that Kei needs help. He is in grade 6, class B at Hakusenkan's elementary school division.
The Haida's [[calendar]] is different from many calendars.


April/May- Gansgee 7laa kongaas
===Satoru Takishima===
;{{nihongo||滝島 暁|Takishima Satoru}} {{anime voices|Megumi Ogata|}}
Kei and Sui's dad, age 36, who always looks young and baby-faced. He is very energetic and outgoing. Though he is the CEO of the Takishima company, he likes to escape from work and lets Kei handle his job, usually because people at business meetings tend not to take him seriously as a result of his young appearance. To Kei's chagrin, his father also frequently tends to drag his son off to meetings, occasionally in foreign places. Satoru also possesses superb fighting skills and trained in his youth to be as strong as a pro-wrestler. He is a good friend of Hikari's father. Before marrying Midori and into the Takishima family, his surname was {{nihongo|''Utagawa''|宇田川}}.


May/Early June- Wa.aay gwaalgee
===Midori Takishima===
;{{nihongo||滝島 碧|Takishima Midori}}


June/July- Kong koaas
Midori, age 37, is Kei and Sui's mother who works overseas in [[Australia]]. Both of her sons inherited their looks from her, so they bear a strong resemblance to her. She is obsessed with shopping and longs for the day when Kei will ask her to buy something for him. In Chapter 57, she spends time with Hikari and Kei and goes shopping, but becomes discouraged that Kei still will not ask for anything in particular. Hikari tells her that he only asks for his "mommy". Her relationship with her father, President Takishima, is strained.


July/August- Sgaana gyaas
===President Takishima===
; {{anime voices|Kazuya Ichijo}}


August/September- K'ijaas
Kei's grandfather is the head of the Takishima group and is a powerful man in a business world. However, he is rarely seen by others, including his own family members. He makes his first appearance in chapter 25, when he makes a phone call to Kei's father. When Hikari speaks with him over the phone, he plants the idea in her head that Kei is burdened by her very presence. She meets him face to face in Chapter 59, when President Takishima tries to convince Hikari to transfer schools. He disapproves of Kei's relationship with Hikari and makes many attempts to separate them, such as sending Aoi, arranging marriage meetings for Hikari in London, and arranging a marriage between Kei and a girl named Alisa. President Takishima feels sick every time he even sees a picture of Hikari, though his reason behind his dislike of her remains unknown.


September/October- K'alayaa Kongaas
===Nagi Takishima===
;{{nihongo||滝島 凪|Takishima Nagi}}


October/November- K'eed adii
A beautiful girl with unbelievable strength, Nagi is Kei's cousin and is a year younger than him. She appears during a brief vacation the SA take at Akira's villa, where they intend to celebrate Kei's coming birthday. Extremely arrogant and full of pride, Nagi proclaims herself to be Kei's fiancée and loves him very much. However, she quickly becomes jealous of Kei and Hikari's closeness with one another and ends up acting unpleasantly towards the rest of the SA in order to get Kei's attention. Upset that Kei, the only person she feels comfortable around, cares more about Hikari, Nagi tries to get rid of Hikari, who comes to see that Nagi only wants to please someone she cares about. Afterwards, the two reconcile and become friends.


November/December- Jid Kongaas
==Hanazono Family==
===Jiro Hanazono===
;{{nihongo||華園 次郎|Hanazono Jiro}} {{anime voices|Atsushi Imaruoka}}


December/January- Kong gyaangaas
Hikari's father is a carpenter and lives in the old shopping district of Tokyo. As a fan of pro-wrestling, he taught Hikari how to fight when she was a child. Through his interest in pro-wrestling, Jiro met Kei's father and they introduced their children to one another when Hikari and Kei were six years old. After Hikari was defeated by Kei, she begged her father to allow her to enroll in the same schools as Kei in order to obtain the opportunity to defeat him. Headstrong and hot-headed like his daughter, Jiro agreed and has since supported her endeavours to defeat her rival. He and Kei's father are friends.


January/February- Hlgiduum kongaas
===Atsushi Hanazono===
;{{nihongo||華園 亮|Hanazono Atsushi}} {{anime voices|Mitsushiro Ichiki}}


February/March- Taan kongaas
Atsushi is Hikari's older brother. He is currently a junior in high school and attends a normal high school. Unlike Hikari, he dislikes fighting and has refrained from any physical fights and yelling since he was little. This is because when they were very young, Hikari saw Atsushi beating up a boy who hit her and his facial expression was so scary to her that she fainted. However, when he feels his sister is in danger he breaks away from his peaceful nature and will not hesitate to beat someone up. Even now, Hikari still becomes terrified whenever he becomes truly angry.


March- Xiid gayaas
===Masako Hanazono===
;{{nihongo||華園 昌子|Hanazono Masako}} {{anime voices|Makiko Nabei}}


April- Wiid gyaas
Hikari's mother is a kind and good-natured person who seems to accept Hikari's activities, whether it is taking care of Kei overnight or suddenly travelling to London, without too much fuss. She frequently welcomes Hikari's friends to her house, usually without warning on Hikari's part. However, she does lament that Hikari is unusually strong for a girl (such that she finds it difficult to even see Hikari as a girl at times) and absolutely refuses to allow her daughter to enter the kitchen, well aware of Hikari's destructive inability to cook.


==Culture and society==
==Supporting characters==
[[Image:Haida Heritage Centre.jpg|thumb|Haida Heritage Centre at Kaay Llnagaay]]
===Yahiro Saiga===
;{{nihongo||雑賀 八尋|Saiga Yahiro}} {{anime voices|Kisho Taniyama|}}
*Birthday: July 7
*Blood Type: AB
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Younger Brother
*Favorite food: Akira's homemade pastries


The Haida theory of social structure, although much impacted by the Colonial experience remains based on [[Kinship and descent|moiety]] lineages. That is, the society is divided into two groupings, one called Raven and the other Eagle. There are a variety of subgroups that fall into either of the moieties. The moieties and their subgroups of Clans, or matrilineal lineages, own unique combinations of crests and other intellectual properties such as songs and names. People cannot marry a member of their own moiety.
A carefree young man with a sinister side, Yahiro has known both Kei and Akira since they were children. He holds the distinction of having beaten Kei once during their childhood in a game of tag which Kei lost because Yahiro had locked the door to the roof to prevent Kei from winning. Yahiro attends Kokusen Academy, another high school, and is the heir to the Saiga Financial Group, a group that is even higher in status than the Takishima group. When he was young, Yahiro had no friends, for the most part because his attitude prevented him from making anyone smile or laugh and made them cry instead. He chose not to become friends with anyone until he met Sakura; at first, he had rejected her offer to become friends with her, but complied after they went through a lot of trouble to save the rabbit they were trying to bring back to its home in the mountains.


Potlatches, ceremonies to show wealth or to earn status in a community, were closely linked to a man's moiety. Potlatches would have been a huge celebration, hosted by a wealthy member of the community. A host would have invited hundreds of guests. Guests would have come in best dress and in best canoes, ready for up to 10 days of feasting. Afterwards, all the host's possessions were distributed to guests. However, this would not have bankrupted a host, as the banking system allowed for full recovery plus additional tangible and more highly coveted intellectual property all provided through "gifts" from other lineage potlatch, if theirs was up to standard.
He has a crush on Akira since childhood and is very protective of her, willing to use whatever means necessary to protect her, even if she hates him for it. It is this protective nature that made him drive away Akira's only friend, Sayo, after he overheard her saying how she never liked Akira and was only her friend because Akira was rich and she enjoyed all the privileges and status that came with the friendship. Akira had believed that Yahiro had been jealous of her relationship with the "poor" kid she was playing with and never forgave Yahiro for ending her friendship with Sayo. He never told Akira the truth and has no intention of telling her. His hatred of "poor" people comes largely from this incident, where he believes the poor exploit the rich. He eventually gives up his feelings for Akira, telling Tadashi that if he ever makes Akira cry, he will never forgive him. While he still cares for Akira, Yahiro comes to see Megumi as an important person to him and encourages her to sing.


Although Haida societal structure is a living process, its roots are in the ancient [[potlatch]] system and remain recognizable in contemporary political, economic and legal functions. On that portion of Haida territory claimed by Canada, the two communities of Massett and Skidegate have Band Councils that experience varying degrees of influence and control by [[Government of Canada|Canada's federal government]]. The persistence of Haida government can be seen in that the influence of the Band Councils, insofar as they may be seen as agents of Canadian government authority, are regulated by a community governance system of Matriarchs and Lineage authorities.
===Sakura Ushikubo===
;{{nihongo||牛窪 桜|Ushikubo Sakura}} {{anime voices|Natsuko Kuwatani|}}
*Birthday: December 14
*Blood Type: B
*Family Composition: Father
*Favorite Food: [[Unagi]], fresh cream


The Haida are hunters and gatherers in one of the laregst remaining temperate rain forests on earth. Because they lived so near the sea, fishing was crucial to them. Although Haida are active deep water fisheries for [[black cod]] and [[halibut]] salmon is also a main source of protein and is filleted & smoked and otherwise processed to keep through the winter. The skeleton of the first salmon caught in a season is frequently placed back where it was caught. This was an offering, so the Salmon would return the following season.
Sakura is the daughter of the head of Ushikubo Medical Manufacturing Group and is Kei's first marriage meeting (or [[omiai]]) partner to appear in the series. While she does not consider Kei her type, describing him as a "devil king", she considers him a possible marriage partner because his abilities would be advantageous to her family's business. Sakura hates dishonest people with a passion, and her family's motto is centered around honesty and punishing/loathing dishonest people. Hikari's straightforward and honest nature allows the girls to become friends. She attends the same school Yahiro does and sometimes plans stuff out with him (whether the plans be good or evil). Sakura falls in love with Jun at first sight, as he fit her ideal of someone who was a "prince", and accepted his split personality. She is now dating him. She first appears in volume 4.


Haidas are well known as skilled artisans of wood, metal and design. They have also shown much perseverance and resolve in the area of forest conservation. These vast forests of cedar and spruce where the Haida make their home are on pre-glacial land which is believed to be almost 14,000 years old. Haida communities located in [[Prince of Wales Island]], Alaska, and the Queen Charlotte Islands also share a common border with other indigenous peoples such as the [[Tlingit]] and the Cape Fox tribes of the [[Tsimshian]]. The Tlingit called the Haida ''Deikeenaa'', "far out to sea people", from the distance separating Haida Gwaay from the mainland and the [[Alexander Archipelago]].
===Aoi Ogata===
;{{nihongo||緒方 蒼|Ogata Aoi}} {{anime voices|Kōji Yusa}}
*Birthday: August 21
*Blood Type: A
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Younger Sister
*Favorite food: Sushi


Like all [[Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast|Indigenous]] peoples of the northwest coast of North America, the Haida make extensive use of red cedar bark, which is still used both as a [[cedar bark textile|textile]] for [[clothing]], [[rope]]s and [[sails]], and in its raw form, as a building material or even [[armor]]. Most goods were fashioned from the wood of the [[Western Red cedar]], [[Nootka Cypress]], [[Tsuga|Western Hemlock]] and [[Sitka Spruce]]. Highly prized plant bark and root weavers still create an array of clothing including hats and containers. The ancient ''Naahinn'' form of weaving also called ''Chilkat'' continues, although commercially produced wool is used instead of mountain goat. The famous Haida totem poles were also carved on the trunks of Red Cedar trees.
Aoi is a junior secretary of President Takishima, Kei's grandfather, and is nineteen years old. He has a cold and calm character, and has always been expressionless, not smiling even once. Like Kei, he has the ability to see something only once and memorize it, though his ability made him a victim of teasing as a child. He first met Kei when he was eight and Kei was five, and came to admire and deeply respect Kei, coming to see him as an almost kindred spirit. Aoi initially appears when he is sent to Japan from [[London]], on orders to convince Kei to transfer to London, which had been planned by Kei's grandfather. When Aoi discovers what is causing Kei to hesitate, Aoi tries to eliminate the problem: Hikari. He tries to threaten her, but Kei beats him up, and then tries to bribe her but ends up having a cheque ripped to pieces by Hikari. Afterwards, he realizes that he should not pressure Kei into the situation that he is not ready for and also realizes that he is most at peace when he sees Hikari and Kei smiling. He first appears in chapter 27.


===Finn Koupe Shuzette===
===Clans===
The Haida society is broken into two clans: the raven and the eagle. Among the clans (which also has a name, like a Family name) which hold a lot of crests such as killer-whale, frog, moon, hummingbird, bear, and so forth. In this "[[descent group|moiety]]" society, one cannot marry someone from the same clan, and must marry outside of their own clan. When a child is born they automatically join the clan that their Mother was a member of. There were generally arranged marriages held among the families holding Chieftanship to keep it among the same family.
;{{nihongo||フィン・クープ・シュゼット(2世)|Finn Kuppu Shuzetto (2 sei)|[[a.k.a]] "Finn Koupe Shuzette (the 2nd)"}}
*Birthday: December 30th
*Blood Type: O
*Family Composition: Father, Mother
*Favorite Food: Chocolate


[[Image:Haida lang.png|thumb|upright|250px|Pre-contact distribution of Haida.]]
Finn is the prince of a small country whose true gender has been concealed from the public. She initially appears as a reluctant participant in a series of arranged marriage meetings Kei's grandfather sets up for Hikari. When Hikari flees from the meeting, Finn falls for her on the spot, since Hikari fits the exact description of Finn's ideal person: a woman with long dark hair possessing a sweet yet tough personality who wears a red dress. After helping Hikari escape, Finn follows her to Japan with the intention of proposing to her. The SA later discover that Finn's mother fits the description of the ideal person Finn wants; Hikari tells Finn that it's a wonderful thing to look up to her mother so much before adding that she and Finn can still be friends. Afterwards, Finn enrolls in Hakusenkan and tries using Ryuu to get closer to Hikari, but ends up becoming very good friends with him. Finn's exact ranking in Hakusenkan has not been revealed, but it is known that she is in C class. She first appears in chapter 47.


===Potlatch===
Finn cares for Hikari, but also cares deeply for Ryuu to the point that she falls in love with him. Ryuu discovers not long after meeting Finn that the prince is actually a girl; in Finn's country, the law states that the country must be ruled by a male and if the heir is a female, she will be raised as a male. Upon explaining this to Ryuu, she asks that he keeps her secret as they will be severely punished if it is revealed. Shortly after Hikari discovers Finn's secret, Finn and Hikari attempt to convince Finn's father to allow Hikari to return to Japan rather than face life imprisonment in Finn's country. The issue is resolved when it is revealed that Finn's mother is pregnant and the baby will be a boy; Finn is revealed to be a girl to everyone else and her unborn brother will become the heir to the throne. She returns to Japan afterward, still studying at Hakusenkan and spending time with Ryuu.
{{Main|Potlatch}}
The Potlatch ceremony was a ritual based event which involved feasting and the exchange of gifts between chiefs and surrounding clans. The celebration was a time of plenty and was a way of re-iterating bonds between groups. The potlatch ceremony was based on the concepts of reciprocity and indebtedness. Many would be held and the larger and more grandiose the occasion the more respect was given. The social bonds and coherence was also a substantial part of the potlatch ceremony, something which the western world failed to take into consideration when they tried to ban it in the late 19th century as it was seen to rival Christmas.
Nobles, from the towns, get everyone together and have a party. The purpose for these potlatch ceremonies, is to show off their wealth. The nobles would give, everything they own, away. They would also have huge feasts and dance around a fire.


Canada once banned and attempted to stop these ceremonies. This would be consistent with other Canadian efforts such as [[residential schools]] to undermine the legal, political and social structures of these Indigenous Peoples.
===Sumire Karino===
;{{nihongo||狩野 菫|Karino Sumire}} {{anime voices|Atsuko Tanaka|}}


===Art===
Tadashi's mother, age undisclosed, is the director of Private Hakusen Academy. Little is known about her and she never appears in front of the students. A woman whose actions speak for themselves, she is strict and intimidating. She is the primary reason why Tadashi entered the SA class and has threatened to punish him if he gets a lower rank than fifth place. In the past, she frequently punished Tadashi when he failed to please her and does not hesitate to do so in the present when he offends her, often extending the punishment to the rest of the SA if she deems fit. She and her husband were really popular in school when they were still students. As Tadashi stated, his parents always had a boyfriend and girlfriend.
[[Image:Totem RMBC 3.jpg|thumb|upright|Haida [[totem pole]] at [[Thunderbird Park]] in [[Victoria, BC]].<ref>{{Cite web | title=Thunderbird Park – A Place of Cultural Sharing | url=http://www.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca/exhibits/tbird-park/index.html | accessdate=2006-06-24 | publisher=[[Royal British Columbia Museum]]}} "Haida Pole, 1955. Carvers: Mungo Martin, David Martin and Henry Hunt. Based on: Haida Memorial Pole. This is a version of a pole that was purchased by Charles F. Newcombe at t'anuu 'llnagaay (eelgrass town) in 1911. It was raised by a man named Checkgath around 1880 as a memorial to his wife and shows some of Checkgath's family crests. The original pole is now in the entrance lobby of the museum."</ref>]]
<!---


Haida art consists of two dimensional painting and three-dimensional sculptural works. Painting was accomplished through the use of brushes made from porcupine quills. Before contact with European traders, the Haida derived pigments from natural sources. Lignite or charcoal produced black, ochre a brownish-red and copper minerals provided greenish tones. In the early nineteenth century vermilion was introduced through trade with ships returning to the Northwest Coast from China. Pigments were mixed with a medium derived from salmon eggs.
Since Iori Tokiwa's role so far has been limited, please leave him in in the "Other characters" section for now.


Painting and two dimensional art usually makes use of formlines that outline basic shapes, often ovoid, in heavy dark outline. Images can be built up from the positioning of formline defined shapes embellished with mouths, beaks, claws, horns or other attributes of the person or animal being depicted. Painting and sculpture both focused greatly on natural fauna. [[Charles Edenshaw]] was an important artist active in the late nineteenth century.
--->


The substitution of carved surfaces for painting represents a step toward sculpture. Incised lines define the basic formline structures. A particularly fine example is a carved Haida bent bowl from about 1860 ([[Royal British Columbia Museum]] Catalogue No. 4114) that likely would have held food for honoured guests at potlatches.
==Other characters==


In sculpture Haida masks are similar with those of other Northwest Coast First Nations such as Tlingit or Tsimshian. Haida carving on totem poles is more readily distinguishable. The last early Haida totem poles were carved in the villages of Tanu and Skedans in the late 1870s. Stress on the culture resulted in a near abandonment of traditional forms of art in the early 20th century. [[Bill Reid]], a sculptor born in 1920, began exploring Haida art in the 1950s, influenced by old jewelry worn by members of his mothers family, who were Haidapoo.
===Alisa Epulton===
;{{nihongo||アリサ・エイプルトン|Arisa Eipuruton}}


In ancient times, valuable items were also fashioned from [[copper]]. Haida culture places high value on a sophisticated and abstract iconic art form. Although most impressively expressed in large monumental totem poles, this highly disciplined design is applied to a wide range of materials, including the human body through tattooing. The diversity of Haida design today can be seen, among other things, in its expression through [[Haida Manga]].
Alisa is the fifteen year old granddaughter of Theo Epulton, the Takishima group's biggest stockholder. She likes to eat without limit. When Kei is trying to move the main branch of the Takishima group to Japan, one of the conditions to do so was to convince Alisa to study in Japan. To accomplish this, Kei intended to use Alisa's love of food by introducing her to Japanese food; while Alisa had been set on Mexico because she wanted to eat Mexican tacos, she realized how hard Kei had been trying and decided to study in Japan after all. Soon afterward, Kei's grandfather arranges for Kei and Alisa to be engaged, though the arrangement is called off when Aoi takes over as the new CEO of the company. Alisa, curious to see what the girl Kei loves is like, meets with Hikari in Japan and began to give her lessons on to be a good girlfriend. She eventually gives up when she finds that Hikari is unable to directly say that she loves Kei. What Alisa wants most is to know what it feels like for a man to say he loves her. She later develops feelings for Ryuu.


===Iori Tokiwa===
==Notable Haidas==
;{{nihongo||常盤 庵|Tokiwa Iori}}
<!---since Iori Tokiwa's role so far has been limited, please leave him in this section for now--->
As of the beginning of Hikari's 2nd year of high school, she is tied 2nd place with Iori Tokiwa, the second son of the head of the Tokiwa Hospital. He has a sickly younger sister who has been receiving medical treatment outside the [[Prefectures of Japan|prefecture]] and has only recently returned to Tokyo. Upon his introduction, Iori's score on the most recent examination results in the rankings of everyone below Hikari to drop by one place. He also wants to get first place, so Hikari sees him as both a rival and a friend. He works part-time in order to earn money for a dream he wants to fulfill, even if it is against school rules to do so, and lives in one room apartment by himself. Iori is apparently striving to become a [[beautician]]. He develops feelings for Hikari and intends to compete with Kei for Hikari; after Hikari agrees to grant him a wish if he obtains first place, Iori ties with Kei on the midterm exams and tells Hikari to break up with Kei, though he later brushes it off as a joke. He eventually realizes that Hikari loves Kei and for his wish, he asks Hikari for them to always remain good friends.


* [[Florence Davidson]], artist and memoirist
===Chitose Saiga===
* [[Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas]], artist
;{{nihongo||雑賀 千歳|Saiga Chitose}} {{anime voices|Ami Koshimizu|}}
*[[Reg Davidson]], artist
*Family Composition: Father, Mother, Older Brother
* [[Robert Davidson (artist)|Robert Davidson]], artist
* [[Freda Diesing]], artist
* [[Charles Edenshaw]], artist
* [[Gerry Marks]], artist
* [[Bill Reid]], artist
* [[Jay Simeon]], artist
* [[Skaay]], mythteller
* [[Guujaaw]], aka Gary Edenshaw, artist and politician


==Anthropologists and scholars==
Chitose is the younger brother of Yahiro and is about nine years old. He initially appears in Hawaii during the SA's summer vacation when Ryuu (and by extension, the rest of the SA) is forced to entertain Chitose because he is the son of a client for his family. He is close to Ryuu, much to the chagrin of the twins, and it is implied that he has known Kei for a long time. Like his older brother, he dislikes poor people, which leads him to treat Hikari differently from others at first. However, when Hikari shows genuine concern for his well-being despite how badly he treated her, Chitose quickly becomes attached to her.
Below if a brief list of anthropologists and scholars who have worked over the Haida.


* [[Marius Barbeau]]
===Yui Oikawa===
*
;{{nihongo||及川 唯|Oikawa Yui}} {{anime voices|Noriko Shitaya}}
* [[Robert Bringhurst]]
* [[Wilson Duff]]
* [[Christie Harris]]
* [[John R. Swanton]]
* [[Bill Holm]]


==See also==
When the S.A is punished by the director of the school as a result of Tadashi lying to her, they are forced to attend a regular high school where Akira meets Yui, a girl who resembles her childhood friend Sayo. Initially wary, Akira avoids contact with her, but eventually apologizes and befriends her. However, Akira's fear that Yahiro would break up her newfound friendship results in Akira using extreme measures to protect Yui, who begins to feel awkward around her friends. Yahiro investigates her for Akira's sake and discovers that Yui stole Akira's jewellery, since her family had financial issues that were forcing them to move. He threatens her so that she will stay away from Akira; though Yui agrees, she feels that she needs to say goodbye to Akira and almost gets hit by a car. Yahiro saves her and they end up in Yahiro's home, where Akira finds them. When Akira believes that Yahiro has hurt Yui, Yui clarifies that Yahiro saved her and apologizes to Akira for stealing her jewellery. Happy that they are still friends, Akira ends up helping Yui's family and they keep in touch.
*[[Haida language]]
*[[Haida mythology]]
*[[Council of the Haida Nation]]
*[[Bill Reid]] - renowned carver and leader of the Haida cultural revival
*[[Guujaaw]] - Haida carver, musician, traditional medicine practitioner and political activist
*[[haida manga]]


===Hajime Kakei===
==Further reading==
* Blackman, Margaret B. (1982; rev. ed., 1992) ''During My Time: Florence Edenshaw Davidson, a Haida Woman.'' Seattle: University of Washington Press.
;{{nihongo||筧 肇|Kakei Hajime}} {{anime voices|Yoshinori Fujita|}}
* Boelscher, Marianne (1988) ''The Curtain Within: Haida Social and Mythical Discourse.'' Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
*Nicknames: ''Loser President, Loser Dog, Pathetic President, Cowardly President, That idiot''
* Bringhurst, Robert (2000) ''A Story as Sharp as a Knife: The Classical Haida Mythtellers and Their World.'' Douglas & McIntyre.
*Geduhn, Thomas (1993) "Eigene und fremde Verhaltensmuster in der Territorialgeschichte der Haida." (Mundus Reihe Ethnologie, Band 71.) Bonn: Holos Verlag.
* Harris, Christie (1966) ''Raven's Cry.'' New York: Atheneum.
* Huteson, Pamela (2007) "Transformation Masks" Surrey, B.C. Canada: Hancock House Publishers LTD. ISBN- 13 978-0-88839-635-8 and ISBN- 10 0-88839-635-X
* Snyder, Gary (1979) ''He Who Hunted Birds in His Father's Village.'' San Francisco: Grey Fox Press.
* Stearns, Mary Lee (1981) ''Haida Culture in Custody: The Masset Band.'' Seattle: University of Washington Press.
*[http://www.nosracines.ca/e/toc.aspx?id=2935 ''The Hydah mission, Queen Charlotte's Islands : an account of the mission and people, with a descriptive letter''], Rev. Charles Harrison, publ. Church Missionary Society/Seeley, Jackson & Halliday, London, England, 1884.
* Yahgulanaas, Michael Nicoll (2008) "Flight of the Hummingbird" Vancouver; Greystone Books.


==Notes==
First appearing in chapter five, Hajime Kakei is the Student President at Hakusenkan and holds first place in the class 2-A. He is frequently hospitalized for feeling weak and relies on using money to get what he wants. He begins to send various challenges to the SA when nobody appears at his talk show; since none of the SA members wanted to attend his show, nobody else in the student body wanted to either. Because of Hikari's open and kind nature, he seems to develop a crush on her, though is always scared off by Kei before he gets any chance to express his sentiments. He is not very popular among his classmates, most of whom do not share his animosity towards the SA.
{{reflist}}


==References==
==Misc. characters==
*Macnair, Peter L.; Hoover, Alan L.; Neary, Kevin (1981) ''The Legacy &ndash; Continuing Traditions of Canadian Northwest Coast Indian Art''


===Rin Yamamoto===
==External links==
{{commonscat}}
;{{nihongo||山本 鈴|Yamamoto Rin}}
* [http://www.haidaheritagecentre.com/ Haida Heritage Centre at Kaay Llnagaay]
* [http://www.civilisations.ca/aborig/haida/haindexe.html The Canadian Museum of Civilization - The Haida]


[[Category:Haida| ]]
The mother of Megumi and Jun, age 40, Rin is well-known as a genius vocalist who frequently travels the world to perform concerts and is usually working in Germany. She is cheerful and energetic and, like Kei's father, looks much younger than she actually is. The twins have not seen her in two years and are notably surprised when she drops by to visit them when she happens to have a concert in Japan. Rin is apparently very protective of her children; in response to a letter Megumi had written to her mother when she believed that she had been jilted, Rin reveals a rather bloodthirsty streak and comically pulls out a gun to go and attack the boy who supposedly rejected her daughter. Rin first appears in chapter 85.


[[ca:Haida]]
===Shinobu Tsuji===
[[de:Haida (Volk)]]
;{{nihongo||辻 忍|Tsuji Shinobu}}
[[es:Haida]]

[[eu:Haida hizkuntza]]
Shinobu, age 18, is Ryuu's older sister. She does not like to appear in front of other people, and even Ryuu does not see her often. A tidy and kindhearted woman, she loves to follow Ryuu around whenever she has the chance and has a collection of pictures of her younger brother in her room. Shinobu has so far only appeared in an extra comic in the S.A fanbook.
[[fr:Haïda]]

[[hr:Haida]]
[[Category:Lists of anime and manga characters|Special A]]
[[ja:S・A]]
[[pl:Haidowie]]
[[pt:Haida]]
[[fi:Haidat]]

Revision as of 18:09, 10 October 2008

Haida morganism
Haida carver Saaduuts, 2007
Regions with significant populations
Canada Canada
(British Columbia British Columbia)

United States United States
(Alaska Alaska)
Languages
English, Haida

The Haida (19th C.-early 20th C.) Indigenous nation of the west coast of North America. The Haida territories comprise the archipelago of the Queen Charlotte Islands, Shoeakawooo("land of the Haida"), and including part of Prince of Wales Island in the southernmost Alaska Panhandle, which is the home of a subgroup called the Kaigani Haida. The term "Haida Nation" can and does refer to both the people and their government, the Council of the Haida Nation. Their ancestral language is the Haida language, which has never been adequately classified by linguists because of its uniqueness.[2] In addition to those Haida residing in the Queen Charlottes and Alaska, there are also many Haidas in various urban areas in the western United States and Canada.

Haida society continues to be much engaged in the production of a robust and highly stylized art form. While frequently expressed in large wooden carvings totem poles or ornate jewelery it is also moving quickly into the work of populist expression such as Haida manga.

History

Site of the former Haida village SGang Gwaay Llanagaay

Haidas were traditionally known as ruthless warriors and slave traders, raiding as far as California. Haida oral narratives record journeys as far north as the Bering Sea, and one account implies that even Asia was visited by Haidas before Europeans entered the Pacific. The Haida's ability to travel was dependent upon a supply of ancient Western Red cedar trees that were carved and shaped into their famous Pacific Northwest Canoes. Carved from a single red cedar tree, a vessel could sleep 15 adults head to toe, and was propelled by up to 60 paddlers (who often included women). In the event of a battle at sea, paddlers were armed with heavy stone rings (18 to 23 kg) attached to woven tree root or bark ropes. These devices, are thrown at enemy canoes, inflicting substantial damage. Haida warriors entered battle with red cedar armor, wooden shields, stone maces and atlatls. War helmets were carved. These techniques are unknown to anyone other than the Haida people as they have kept it secret for many years. It is still unknown how the Haida would carve their war helmets and how they looked.

The Haida were feared along the coast because of their practice of making lightning raids against which their enemies had little defense, a similar tactic used by Imperial Japan during World War 2 & also by Genghis Khan , during the rise of the Mongol Empire. Their great skills of seamanship, their superior craft and their relative protection from retaliation in their island fortress added to the aggressive posture of the Haida towards neighboring tribes. Diamond Jenness, an early anthropologist at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, caught their essence in his description of the Haida as the "Indian Vikings of the North West Coast".

Those were stirring times, about a century ago, when the big Haida war canoes, each hollowed out of a single cedar tree and manned by fifty or sixty warriors, traded and raided up and down the coast from Sitka in the north to the delta of the Fraser River in the south. Each usually carried a shaman or medicine man to catch and destroy the souls of enemies before an impending battle; and the women who sometimes accompanied the warriors fought as savagely as their husbands.

The Haida went to war to acquire objects of wealth, such as coppers and Chilkat blankets, that were in short supply on the islands, but primarily for slaves, who enhanced their productivity or were traded to other tribes. High-ranking captives were also the source of other property received in ransom such as crest designs, dances and songs.

Even prehistorically, the Haida engaged in sea battles.[citation needed] They tied cedar bark ropes to heavy stone rings that were hurled to smash enemy canoes and that could quickly be retrieved for subsequent throws. A stone weighing 18 to 23 kg (40 to 50 pounds) could shatter the side of a dugout canoe and cause it to founder. Most tribes avoided sea battles with the Haida and tried to lure them ashore for a more equitable fight. The Tsimshian developed a signal-fire system to alert their villages on the Skeena River as soon as Haida invaders reached the mainland.

The incidence of warfare was undoubtedly accelerated in the half century from 1780 to 1830, when the Haida had no effective enemies except the many European and American traders on their shores who would rather trade than fight.[citation needed] During this period, the Haida successfully captured more than half a dozen ships. One was the ship Eleanora, taken by chiefs of the village of Skungwai (or Ninstints) in retaliation for the maltreatment Chief Koyah had received from its captain. An even more spectacular event was the capture of the ship Susan Sturgis by Chief Weah (Matthews) of Masset and the rescue of its crew by Albert Edward Edenshaw.

In such conflicts, the Haida quickly learned the newcomers' fighting tactics, which they used to good effect in subsequent battles, as Jacob Brink notes:

As early as 1795, a British trading ship fired its cannons at a village in the central part of the archipelago because some of the crew had been killed by the inhabitants, and the survivors had to put hastily to sea when the Indians fired back at them. They found out later that the Indians had used a cannon and ammunition pilfered from an American Schooner a few years earlier.

Swivel guns were added to many Haida war canoes, although initially the recoil on discharge caused the hulls of many craft to split.

Fortified sites were part of the defensive strategy of all Northwest Coast groups for at least 2,000 years. Captain James Cook was so impressed with one Haida fort off the west coast of Graham Island that he called it Hippah Island after the Maori forts he had seen in New Zealand. Military defences at Haida forts included stout palisades, rolling top-log defences, heavy trapdoors and fighting platforms supplied with stores of large boulders to hurl at invaders.

1774 and after

The archipelago was visited in 1776 by Juan Pérez (at Langara Island) and in 1778 by Captain James Cook. In 1787 the islands were surveyed by Captain George Dixon. The islands were named by Captain Dixon after one of his ships, the Queen Charlotte, which was named after the wife of King George. The first fur trader ships arrived in 1774. The hunting of sea otter in Haida Gwaay serviced an international trading circuit: ships leaving the islands brought the pelts to China where they were traded for oriental goods; the ships then returned to the west, selling their cargo for substantial profit. Within a century, sea otter were in danger of extinction.

European diseases

Chart of the decimated and rebounding population of Haida from the Queen Charlotte Islands and Kaigani Haida from Prince of Wales Island

European-introduced diseases consisted of smallpox, measles, venereal disease, influenza and others. At the time of colonial contact, Haida Gwaay's population was roughly 10,000-12,000 people residing in several dozen towns (many of them slaves from other tribes). During the 1800s, smallpox reduced the population by ninety percent; other diseases arrived as well, including typhoid, measles, and syphilis, affecting more. The worst single smallpox outbreak occurred in the BC-wide smallpox epidemic of 1862, when the population fell by more than half. E.O.S. Scholefield and F.W. Howay in their 1914 book British Columbia: From the Earliest Times to the Present, give a population figure of 2,000 in 1879 in comparison to an 1840 census figure of 8,328.[3] In 1900, 700 people remained. In keeping with an inclination to maintain multiple or seasonal communities, a number of wintering towns were consolidated into two primary settlements, Skidegate and Masset. Some 4000 people live on the islands today. Indigenous people (Haida) live throughout the islands, and maintain two exclusive communities in Skidegate and Old Masset, each with a population of around 1000 people.Haida probably account for close to 50% of the current island population.

Villages

Historical Haida villages were[4]:

s*Klinkwan (Kaigani Haida, Prince of Wales Island)

Calendar

The Haida's calendar is different from many calendars.

April/May- Gansgee 7laa kongaas

May/Early June- Wa.aay gwaalgee

June/July- Kong koaas

July/August- Sgaana gyaas

August/September- K'ijaas

September/October- K'alayaa Kongaas

October/November- K'eed adii

November/December- Jid Kongaas

December/January- Kong gyaangaas

January/February- Hlgiduum kongaas

February/March- Taan kongaas

March- Xiid gayaas

April- Wiid gyaas

Culture and society

Haida Heritage Centre at Kaay Llnagaay

The Haida theory of social structure, although much impacted by the Colonial experience remains based on moiety lineages. That is, the society is divided into two groupings, one called Raven and the other Eagle. There are a variety of subgroups that fall into either of the moieties. The moieties and their subgroups of Clans, or matrilineal lineages, own unique combinations of crests and other intellectual properties such as songs and names. People cannot marry a member of their own moiety.

Potlatches, ceremonies to show wealth or to earn status in a community, were closely linked to a man's moiety. Potlatches would have been a huge celebration, hosted by a wealthy member of the community. A host would have invited hundreds of guests. Guests would have come in best dress and in best canoes, ready for up to 10 days of feasting. Afterwards, all the host's possessions were distributed to guests. However, this would not have bankrupted a host, as the banking system allowed for full recovery plus additional tangible and more highly coveted intellectual property all provided through "gifts" from other lineage potlatch, if theirs was up to standard.

Although Haida societal structure is a living process, its roots are in the ancient potlatch system and remain recognizable in contemporary political, economic and legal functions. On that portion of Haida territory claimed by Canada, the two communities of Massett and Skidegate have Band Councils that experience varying degrees of influence and control by Canada's federal government. The persistence of Haida government can be seen in that the influence of the Band Councils, insofar as they may be seen as agents of Canadian government authority, are regulated by a community governance system of Matriarchs and Lineage authorities.

The Haida are hunters and gatherers in one of the laregst remaining temperate rain forests on earth. Because they lived so near the sea, fishing was crucial to them. Although Haida are active deep water fisheries for black cod and halibut salmon is also a main source of protein and is filleted & smoked and otherwise processed to keep through the winter. The skeleton of the first salmon caught in a season is frequently placed back where it was caught. This was an offering, so the Salmon would return the following season.

Haidas are well known as skilled artisans of wood, metal and design. They have also shown much perseverance and resolve in the area of forest conservation. These vast forests of cedar and spruce where the Haida make their home are on pre-glacial land which is believed to be almost 14,000 years old. Haida communities located in Prince of Wales Island, Alaska, and the Queen Charlotte Islands also share a common border with other indigenous peoples such as the Tlingit and the Cape Fox tribes of the Tsimshian. The Tlingit called the Haida Deikeenaa, "far out to sea people", from the distance separating Haida Gwaay from the mainland and the Alexander Archipelago.

Like all Indigenous peoples of the northwest coast of North America, the Haida make extensive use of red cedar bark, which is still used both as a textile for clothing, ropes and sails, and in its raw form, as a building material or even armor. Most goods were fashioned from the wood of the Western Red cedar, Nootka Cypress, Western Hemlock and Sitka Spruce. Highly prized plant bark and root weavers still create an array of clothing including hats and containers. The ancient Naahinn form of weaving also called Chilkat continues, although commercially produced wool is used instead of mountain goat. The famous Haida totem poles were also carved on the trunks of Red Cedar trees.

Clans

The Haida society is broken into two clans: the raven and the eagle. Among the clans (which also has a name, like a Family name) which hold a lot of crests such as killer-whale, frog, moon, hummingbird, bear, and so forth. In this "moiety" society, one cannot marry someone from the same clan, and must marry outside of their own clan. When a child is born they automatically join the clan that their Mother was a member of. There were generally arranged marriages held among the families holding Chieftanship to keep it among the same family.

Pre-contact distribution of Haida.

Potlatch

The Potlatch ceremony was a ritual based event which involved feasting and the exchange of gifts between chiefs and surrounding clans. The celebration was a time of plenty and was a way of re-iterating bonds between groups. The potlatch ceremony was based on the concepts of reciprocity and indebtedness. Many would be held and the larger and more grandiose the occasion the more respect was given. The social bonds and coherence was also a substantial part of the potlatch ceremony, something which the western world failed to take into consideration when they tried to ban it in the late 19th century as it was seen to rival Christmas. Nobles, from the towns, get everyone together and have a party. The purpose for these potlatch ceremonies, is to show off their wealth. The nobles would give, everything they own, away. They would also have huge feasts and dance around a fire.

Canada once banned and attempted to stop these ceremonies. This would be consistent with other Canadian efforts such as residential schools to undermine the legal, political and social structures of these Indigenous Peoples.

Art

File:Totem RMBC 3.jpg
Haida totem pole at Thunderbird Park in Victoria, BC.[6]

Haida art consists of two dimensional painting and three-dimensional sculptural works. Painting was accomplished through the use of brushes made from porcupine quills. Before contact with European traders, the Haida derived pigments from natural sources. Lignite or charcoal produced black, ochre a brownish-red and copper minerals provided greenish tones. In the early nineteenth century vermilion was introduced through trade with ships returning to the Northwest Coast from China. Pigments were mixed with a medium derived from salmon eggs.

Painting and two dimensional art usually makes use of formlines that outline basic shapes, often ovoid, in heavy dark outline. Images can be built up from the positioning of formline defined shapes embellished with mouths, beaks, claws, horns or other attributes of the person or animal being depicted. Painting and sculpture both focused greatly on natural fauna. Charles Edenshaw was an important artist active in the late nineteenth century.

The substitution of carved surfaces for painting represents a step toward sculpture. Incised lines define the basic formline structures. A particularly fine example is a carved Haida bent bowl from about 1860 (Royal British Columbia Museum Catalogue No. 4114) that likely would have held food for honoured guests at potlatches.

In sculpture Haida masks are similar with those of other Northwest Coast First Nations such as Tlingit or Tsimshian. Haida carving on totem poles is more readily distinguishable. The last early Haida totem poles were carved in the villages of Tanu and Skedans in the late 1870s. Stress on the culture resulted in a near abandonment of traditional forms of art in the early 20th century. Bill Reid, a sculptor born in 1920, began exploring Haida art in the 1950s, influenced by old jewelry worn by members of his mothers family, who were Haidapoo.

In ancient times, valuable items were also fashioned from copper. Haida culture places high value on a sophisticated and abstract iconic art form. Although most impressively expressed in large monumental totem poles, this highly disciplined design is applied to a wide range of materials, including the human body through tattooing. The diversity of Haida design today can be seen, among other things, in its expression through Haida Manga.

Notable Haidas

Anthropologists and scholars

Below if a brief list of anthropologists and scholars who have worked over the Haida.

See also

Further reading

  • Blackman, Margaret B. (1982; rev. ed., 1992) During My Time: Florence Edenshaw Davidson, a Haida Woman. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  • Boelscher, Marianne (1988) The Curtain Within: Haida Social and Mythical Discourse. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
  • Bringhurst, Robert (2000) A Story as Sharp as a Knife: The Classical Haida Mythtellers and Their World. Douglas & McIntyre.
  • Geduhn, Thomas (1993) "Eigene und fremde Verhaltensmuster in der Territorialgeschichte der Haida." (Mundus Reihe Ethnologie, Band 71.) Bonn: Holos Verlag.
  • Harris, Christie (1966) Raven's Cry. New York: Atheneum.
  • Huteson, Pamela (2007) "Transformation Masks" Surrey, B.C. Canada: Hancock House Publishers LTD. ISBN- 13 978-0-88839-635-8 and ISBN- 10 0-88839-635-X
  • Snyder, Gary (1979) He Who Hunted Birds in His Father's Village. San Francisco: Grey Fox Press.
  • Stearns, Mary Lee (1981) Haida Culture in Custody: The Masset Band. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  • The Hydah mission, Queen Charlotte's Islands : an account of the mission and people, with a descriptive letter, Rev. Charles Harrison, publ. Church Missionary Society/Seeley, Jackson & Halliday, London, England, 1884.
  • Yahgulanaas, Michael Nicoll (2008) "Flight of the Hummingbird" Vancouver; Greystone Books.

Notes

  1. ^ Ethnologue. (2005). "Language Family Trees: Na-Dene, Haida." In Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (ed.), Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 15th ed. Dallas, TX: SIL International. Online (2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-01. Follow links for ethnic population figures, as follows: Northern Haida — 1,700 (1,100 in Canada, 600 in US); Southern Haida — 500 (all in Canada).
  2. ^ Schoonmaker, Peter K. (1997). The Rain Forests of Home: Profile Of A North American Bioregion. Island Press. p. 257. ISBN 1559634804. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ E.O.S. Scholefield & F.W. Howay, British Columbia: From the Earliest Times to the Present, Vol I, publ. 1914
  4. ^ Canadian Museum of Civilization webpage on Haida villages
  5. ^ Parks Canada website
  6. ^ "Thunderbird Park – A Place of Cultural Sharing". Royal British Columbia Museum. Retrieved 2006-06-24. "Haida Pole, 1955. Carvers: Mungo Martin, David Martin and Henry Hunt. Based on: Haida Memorial Pole. This is a version of a pole that was purchased by Charles F. Newcombe at t'anuu 'llnagaay (eelgrass town) in 1911. It was raised by a man named Checkgath around 1880 as a memorial to his wife and shows some of Checkgath's family crests. The original pole is now in the entrance lobby of the museum."

References

  • Macnair, Peter L.; Hoover, Alan L.; Neary, Kevin (1981) The Legacy – Continuing Traditions of Canadian Northwest Coast Indian Art

External links