Core Features
Motives and Dynamics
In discussing the Gitksan, John Adams makes the important point that for those at the head of kinship groups, there was
no way within the kinship system to increase wealth or power. In order to do this, ambitious individuals had to go outside kinship groups to create war or other alliances or to establish secret dance societies.
Thus, as elsewhere (the Plains, New Guinea, the Southwest, California),
specific successful secret societies exhibited the ability to spread over large regions very rapidly, creating a relatively uniform regional network of ritual and political organizations that would otherwise be unexpected and surprising
Wealth Acquisition (see also “Membership Fees”)
The cost of advancement into successive ranks escalated in tandem with rank level. While the individual initiate may have personally financed some of these costs as he matured, it is more likely that, as a member of a high-ranking administrative family in a corporate group, he drew upon his entire family, and probably his entire house group or kin group to provide the necessary initiation payments. In this fashion,
secret societies could draw off substantial portions of the surplus production of a large section of a community. This was viewed by the afflicted individuals as extortion…
Thus, successful secret society “shaman” curers were always wealthy.
Tactics
Ideology and Control of Esoteric Knowledge
Central to Northwest Coast secret society ideologies were
putative ancestral contacts with supernatural beings who conveyed supernatural powers to specific ancestors who, in turn, made them available to those of their descendants who wanted those powers and were able to acquire them through memberships in secret societies. This required considerable wealth payments as well as family connections.
Among the Kwakwakawakw and Tsimshian – and probably other Northwest Coastal groups as well as Southwestern groups –
the right to control economic resources, like the right to access specific supernatural spirits, was hereditary, with powers and privileges stemming largely from the exclusive elite hereditary rights and roles in secret societies.
Tsimshian chiefs claimed that only they had the power to deal directly with heavenly beings, whereas such contact would make others go insane or make them sick.
A more extreme expression of this ideology was promulgated among the Bella Coola, some of whom maintained that humans could not do anything without supernatural help.
This presumably also applied to secret society members since shamans were generally members of secret societies and the same term was used to refer to both a shaman and a secret society member. However, in contravention of all norms,
powerful chiefs “feared no restrictions and heeded no conventions”, and undoubtedly justified their actions in terms of their positions in the Sisauk Society. Such actions and attitudes are
characteristic of extreme aggrandizer, if not sociopathic, behavior (Hare 1993).
Supernatural power was portrayed as dangerous (rather like electricity or nuclear power), although secret society members knew how to get it and use it without harming themselves.
Benefits and Threats to Community Well-being
A major benefit that secret societies claimed to provide to their communities was protection from dangerous supernatural powers
which secret societies themselves periodically unleashed in communities to demonstrate how much danger the community might face without their protection. McIlwraith repeatedly mentions
the terror that such events created throughout the entire village, especially for the uninitiated who often cowered in their houses or rooms while destruction rained down on their houses or persons from “Cannibals,” “Breakers,” “Scratchers,” “Bears,” “Wolves,” and other supernatural impersonators. As previously noted, other dancers claimed to capture or steal the souls of spectators.
The Nuuchahnulth had a secret society,
largely composed of women, that specialized in curing and this may be the same as the Tsaiyeq Society... The Quinault also had a secret society that was primarily for curing and whose members were primarily women. However, members of their main society, the Klokwalle (Wolf) Society
were only male and were feared and reputed to kill and eat people during their secret ceremonies .
As another community benefit, at least one dance, the Mother Nature Dance, of the Bella Coola was portrayed as creating or promoting the birth of plant life.
Exclusiveness and Ranking
The Sisauk Society of the Bella Coola was explicitly viewed as an exclusive society of chiefs.
Only children or families of wealthy chiefs could be members and membership gave individuals a warrant for control over a territory derived from their confirmation of ancestral power.
Membership Fees
When a secret society dance was transferred from one Kwakwakawakw mother’s kin group to her son, a square 100 feet on a side was demarcated on the beach and filled with food dishes, pots, cutlery, bracelets, boxes, blankets, copper, canoes, sea otter pelts, slaves, and other wealth items to be given away. The main wealth items that Kane mentioned were slaves, otter furs, dentalia, and wives. Initiations were one of the few events in which wealth was purposefully destroyed. Spradley (1969) also emphasized
the excessive costs of initiations and feasts, listing gold bracelets and broaches as given to guest chiefs from other villages in addition to copious amounts of money, clothes, blankets, dishes, pots, and other items given to helpers.
Public Displays of Power and Wealth
McIlwraith (1948) stated explicitly that
the prestige of the secret societies was derived from their ability to inspire awe, and that they all worked together toward that end, including promoting the ideology that members were supernaturally powerful and dangerous, and killing slaves to reinforce these claims. As a result of these and other tactics, when Europeans first encountered Northwest Coast tribes, the power of secret society members was described as “unquestioned.”
[There are many] graphic accounts of cannibalism, biting people, devouring live dogs, disemboweling dancers or beheading them or burning them or drowning them (all of whom were subsequently brought back to life), and demolishing house walls and furnishings.
The public was allowed to watch many of these performances, sometimes standing by the doorways of host houses or witnessing performances that
were routinely repeated in each house of a village. Destruction of property only
took place during the initiation of a son into a secret society or for taking on a new role or building a house. The possessing spirit was subsequently expelled from the dancer by society members at the end of the ceremony.
Some of the “tricks” used in society performances included making objects disappear, making suns and moons move over the walls by themselves, and throwing dog carcasses up in the air where they disappeared. In conjunction with the Kusiut Society, shamans gave a public feast at which they demonstrated some of their supernatural abilities.
These included changing water to blood or birds’ down; pulling birds’ down from fires; burning stones; making water disappear; and throwing a stick up in the air to the ridge pole, and hanging from the suspended stick.
Some members of the Nuuchahnulth curing society, the Tsaiyeq, were reported to be able to stick a feather in the ground and make it walk around the floor, to handle hot rocks, or put red-hot rocks in their mouths
. One of the most remarkable accounts is of Chief Legaic
who found a look-alike slave and had him act as Legaic in a performance. The slave impersonating Legaic was then killed and cremated as part of the performance, after which the real Legaic rose miraculously from the burial box containing the slave’s ashes.
Enforcement
Secret societies also organized
raiding parties, engaged assassins, and regularly threatened to kill members who divulged society secrets or killed non-members who trespassed into areas used as special meeting places or for ritual events, or even saw some of the sacred paraphernalia, thereby learning some of the secrets of the societies. Anyone revealing society mysteries among the Coast Salish was torn to bits.
Tsimshian individuals who broke the “laws” of the societies were killed, while, as with most other groups, death was threatened for unauthorized people trespassing near ritual locations or into secret society rituals,
especially if they discovered the “tricks” used in demonstrations of supernatural powers during performances.
Tsimshian technical assistants could also be killed if they botched special supernatural effects so that the supernatural display became apparent to spectators as an artifice.
The initiates to the Xaihais Kwakwakawakw Cannibal Society were told:
Now you are seeing all the things the chief’s use. You must remember to take care not to reveal the secrets of the Shamans [society members]. You must abide by the rules of the work of the chiefs. These things you see before you will kill you if you break the rules of the dance. If you make a mistake your parents will die, all your relatives will die.
(Drucker 1941)
Material Aspects
Paraphernalia
Masks were carved by secret society members and represented spirits, but were sometimes supposed to be burned after major rituals like those of the Cannibals and after all Kusiut ceremonies of the Bella Coola, apparently in an attempt to
keep the spirit charade a secret, although Sisauk members received masks to be kept after their initiation.
Masks were normally kept hidden among the Tsimshian, and only displayed or used during supernatural performances. Masks used by impersonators of wolves in the Wolf Society of the Nuuchahnulth were “jealously guarded for a lifetime, and relinquished only at death to some duly appointed heir.”
Secret Society Structures and Settlement Patterns
Village Locations
The Kwakwakawakw, Nuuchahnulth, and Bella Coola secret societies each “had a separate house” in the village. This did not necessarily mean that they owned separate structures but only that a residential house (presumably of a high-ranking member of the society) was designated as taboo to non-initiates during the period that secret societies held their rituals inside it.
Such houses were cleaned for dancing, profane items were removed, and a central hearth was established for society activities.
The houses were publicly marked by hanging a cedar bark ring or other cedar bark symbols outside, or the houses were cordoned off so that non-initiates would not witness any of the secret rituals. Boas specifically states that it was the “Master of Ceremonies’” house that served as a dance house for the Kwakwakawakw, and a separate house was used by society members to prepare for their performances and rituals. In contrast, for the Nuuchahnulth and the Bella Coola, it was the house of the person paying for the initiation which was used as the “taboo” house of the society for their ceremonies
. George MacDonald (personal communication) has also indicated that the prevalent practice among the Tsimshian was probably simply
to transform one of the larger residential “long houses” into temporary secret society dance venues, especially where leaders lacked sufficient resources or labor to construct special facilities for public dance displays.
Within the house, a “room,” or partitioned section, at the rear was used for the seclusion of novices.
However, Marshall (2000) has demonstrated that these communal ritual/ceremonial structures developed after 1890 in response to
the shift from large multifamily households suitable for large ritual performances to smaller nuclear family residences.
The Tlingit were reported to have had special “bath houses” adjacent to some high-ranking households where political elites would gather. This is a pattern reminiscent of Californian sweat lodges used by secret societies for some of their rituals. Whether the Tlingit bath houses were used by secret society elites is unclear, but it seems plausible as part of a general pattern of exclusive gathering places for elites who typically formed secret societies.
Remote Locations
In general, the seclusions, training, and trials of initiates occurred at some distance from villages, in the “woods,” over periods varying for the Kwakwakawakw from one to two months during which little was eaten, and for the Hartley Bay Tsimshian from four to twelve days, the longer periods being for the highest elite children. At least one Gitksan dance was
originally obtained in a cave where dance spirits dwelled and where initiates were supposed to go during their seclusion, and initiates into the main Tsimshian “Shamans’” dance series were sequestered for a month or two
“in a hut or cave in the bush surrounded by corpses”. Similarly, the Wikeno Kwakwakawakw initiates usually stayed “in a shelter or cave which has been prepared for him out in the woods”.
Kwakwakawakw initiates into the aL’aqim Society were also taken to “a cave inhabited by spirits” where they remained for four days. Each Bella Bella local group
apparently used a separate cave in which spirits of ceremonials dwelled and taught initates songs, dances, and magic. The Cave of the Animals (EeSo-28) in the Broughton Archipelago area was also used
to store secret society masks and for secret society ceremonies (“winter ceremonials”) and initiations, as well as having a number of animal pictographs on the cave wall.
In sum, secret societies among complex hunter/gatherers along the Northwest Coast used at least four distinctive types of locations for their activities:
1 venues for public displays of power (usually within or near villages);
2 locations for secret meetings (either within villages and/or in more or less
remote locations depending on climate or other factors);
3 locations for the seclusion of initiates (usually in locations at some distance from
villages, and possibly the same locations used for secret meetings); and
4 isolated remote locations for storing ritual paraphernalia whether owned by
individuals or by secret societies.
Power Animals
Powerful patron animals,
whether derived from natural or imaginary species, were used
to help achieve domination by secret society members. In contrast to the subsistence importance of animal prey species, the nature of most animals used in Northwest Coast iconography was
dominating and threatening – characteristics which were supposed to be conferred upon their human confederates.
Number of Societies in Communities
[Regarding] the Bella Coola, there were clearly two distinct societies, the Kusiut and the Sisauk, with perhaps a third less prestigious or upstart rival society, the A’alk,
about which little is said.
Number of Members, Proportion of Population
Curtis estimated that
60 percent of the native residents at Fort Rupert were “shamans,” i.e., initiated into a secret society.
Women were prohibited from being members of the Deer Society and Wild Man Society among the Nuuchahnulth, and the Wolf Society initiates were described as being boys.
Age of Initiates
“Children” were initiated among the Wikeno and Xaihais Kwakwakawakw,
in one case as young as three years old, but seven years old appears to have been a more common lower age of initiation for some boys