Saturday 21 January 2012

Bears Get Around: Haida Gwaii


Far to the northwest of the coastal B.C. town named Bella Bella – and stretching even further north than the sheltered, forested island where I was born – lies the great archipelago of Haida Gwaii. “Archipelago” is pronounced AR-KI-PE-LA-GO. It means a big group of islands.
  Haida Gwaii is a cluster of about 150 islands, separated from the mainland of British Columbia by Hecate Strait. The two biggest islands in the archipelago are called Graham Island (to the north) and Moresby Island (to the south).



If you look for Haida Gwaii on older maps, you might see it labelled as the “Queen Charlotte Islands.” An English sea-captain, George Dixon, explored the archipelago in 1787, and named it after one of his ships, the Queen Charlotte. In those days, the queen of England was named Charlotte; her husband was King George III.
Shellfish growing on driftwood.
Pillar Rock, on Graham Island. 








1787 was a long time ago, but it’s really like the day before yesterday compared to when the archipelago was first discovered! The Haida First Nation have lived on these islands for at least 8,000 years.

In 2010, the government of British Columbia officially changed the name from “Queen Charlotte Islands” to Haida Gwaii, which means “Islands of the People.”

This bear is my friend Bill. He is proud to reflect the culture of the Haida Nation.
Many Haida people work as fishers, loggers, and artists. Their ancestors were master woodworkers who carved magnificent panels, house columns, masks, crests, boxes, and tall totem poles. They created art in stone, copper, leather, cedar bark, and other materials, too. Modern artists also create beautiful jewellery, and fine paintings.

One of the people who helped assure that Haida art still flourishes today was a man named Bill Reid. His mother, Sophie Gladstone Reid, was Haida. Bill Reid was a great artist. You can see some of his work at the Museum of Anthropology on the campus of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, B.C.

Hey, ask your teacher to show you a Canadian $20 bill! One side shows two of Mr. Reid’s most famous sculptures, Raven and the First Men (which you can visit on display at the U.B.C. Museum of Anthropology) and Spirit of Haida Gwaii (which you can see at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C., or at Vancouver International Airport).

Mr. Reid also carved this fantastic giant bear, now at the U.B.C. Museum of Anthropology. Yup, you could say that my buddy Bill is this bear’s cub!

Visitors go to Haida Gwaii to cycle, tour museums and cultural sites, go surfing, camp, kayak, and fish. And I can tell you – the fishing here for salmon and halibut is great!

The wild bears of Haida Gwaii are a unique sub-species of black bears. Their scientific name is Ursus americanus carlottae – see how that last bit, carlottae, refers to “Charlotte,” the old name for the archipelago? The Haida word for bear is Taan. The Haida people feel a great respect for the black bear, an “Elder Kinsman” and protector of the animal kingdom.



Map courtesy Wikipedia
Story © S. Clouthier
Photos © S. Clouthier and D. Wei

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