Spirits of the Coast: Orcas in Science, Art and History
By Severn Cullis-Suzuki, Jack Lohman, David Suzuki and
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About this ebook
Spirits of the Coast brings together the work of marine biologists, Indigenous knowledge keepers, poets, artists, and storytellers, united by their enchantment with the orca.
Long feared in settler cultures as "killer whales," and respected and honored by Indigenous cultures as friends, family, or benefactors, orcas are complex social beings with culture and language of their own. With contributors ranging from Briony Penn to David Suzuki, Gary Geddes and Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, this collection brings together diverse voices, young and old, to explore the magic, myths, and ecology of orcas.
A richly illustrated literary and visual journey through past and possibility, Spirits of the Coast illustrates how these enigmatic animals have shaped us as much as our actions have impacted them, and provokes the reader to imagine the shape of our shared future.
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Spirits of the Coast - Severn Cullis-Suzuki
Protection by Andy Everson, © 2008.
Spirits of the Coast: Orcas in Science, Art and History
Essays by Nikki Sanchez, Martha Black, Lorne Hammond and Gavin Hanke © the Royal BC Museum, 2020. All other essays, photographs and illustrations © the creators as credited, 2020 unless otherwise noted.
Published by the Royal BC Museum, 675 Belleville Street, Victoria, British Columbia, V8W 9W2, Canada.
The Royal BC Museum is located on the traditional territories of the Lekwungen (Songhees and Xwsepsum Nations). We extend our appreciation for the opportunity to live and learn on this territory.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.
Design by Lara Minja, Lime Design Inc.
Index by Catherine Plear
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Title: Spirits of the coast : orcas in science, art and history / edited by Martha Black, Lorne Hammond and Gavin Hanke, with Nikki Sanchez.
Names: Black, Martha, editor. | Hammond, Lorne, 1955– editor. | Hanke, Gavin, 1967– editor. | Sanchez, Nikki, 1986– editor. | Royal British Columbia Museum, publisher.
Description: Includes bibliographical references and index. | Text in English with some text in Haida and Nootka.
Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20200175025 | Canadiana (ebook) 20200175033 |
ISBN 9780772677686 (hardcover) |
ISBN 9780772677709 (EPUB) |
ISBN 9780772677716 (Kindle) |
ISBN 9780772677693 (PDF)
Subjects: LCSH: Killer whale.
Classification: LCC QL737.C432 S65 2020 | DDC 599.53/6—dc23
To all the future generations of the Salish Sea.
From the gooseneck barnacles;in the intertidal zone to the bald eagles who watch from above, and every creature in between. May you always know the power, grace and magnificence of your Resident orca population.
Viewing T74, a Bigg's orca, from a canoe carved from a Meares Island tree. Tofino Harbour, Clayoquot Sound. Kyler Vos photo.
CONTENTS
Foreword
Jack Lohman, CBE
Introduction
Nikki Sanchez
Connection
SGaana sGaanagwa
Diane Brown with Severn Cullis-Suzuki
We Need Orcas More Than They Need Us
David Suzuki
A Bond Through Salmon, Language and Grandmothers
Misty MacDuffee
The Peace Treaty
Rande Cook with Charlie Matilpi
The Ocean People
Martha Black
The Two Brothers at Tiiaan
Adam Bell with Marianne Ignace and Lawrence Bell
Killer Whales of the Southern Hemisphere
Jared Towers and Rebecca Wellard
Killer Whales
Ken Balcomb
Captivity
Killer Whale
bill bisset
Killer Whales I’ve Known
Steve Huxter
Learning to Love the Sea Wolves
Jason M. Colby
Swimming into Popular Culture
Lorne Hammond
Collecting Culture
Gavin Hanke
Beginnings
Paul Spong
Killer Whales Who Changed the World
Mark Leiren-Young
Consciousness
Orcie the Orca
Oak and Orca School
Learning to Live with Whales
Alex Morton
J-35
Gary Geddes
Luna the Lonely Political Whale
Briony Penn
Kinship
Jess Housty
Kakaw ìn
Valeen Jules with
Patti Frank and
Julia Lucas
Orcinus Orca Skaanaa
Artists’ statements
Contributors
Index
Aerial photograph of a group of Southern Resident killer whales from L pod, 2017. Image collected non-invasively during scientific research using an octocopter drone at an altitude of over 100 feet above the whales, with research authorized by NMFS permit 19091. Photo by John Durban (NOAA) and Holly Fearnbach (SR3).
ARTWORK
Orcinus Orca SKAAnaa
Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas
Carried to the Undersea Village, Orca Behind Bars, Shooting Orcas, J Pod, Threats to the Oceans, Orcinus Orca SKAAnaa
Protection
Andy Everson
Community
Jesse Campbell
The Whale Family Tree
Ray Troll
Peace Treaty
Rande Cook
Small Craft Warning
Christian Geissler
Interstellar Sea Lions
Paul Morstad
Joy of Coming Home
Fanny Aïshaa
Orca Sonar
Chris von Szombathy
Oak and Orca School
Oak and Orca Bioregional Forest School
A Fine Balance
Eric Mazimpaka
Pride
Lauren Brevner and James Harry
‘Alaluka
Haley Kailiehu
Coastal Giant
Noelle Jones
Orca Futurescape
Santiago X
Foreword
Jack Lohman, CBE
CEO, Royal BC Museum
In August 2019, a 15-year-old Bigg’s orca was spotted in Victoria’s Inner Harbour, steps from the Royal BC Museum. The sighting was rare enough that media rushed to get a glimpse, as did tourists and locals—many capturing the orca’s voyage on mobile phones from the shoreline, from water taxis plying the harbour and from nearby office buildings.
The reason for the orca’s visit was unclear. Biologists speculate that it may have been hunting for food, but also that it may simply have been curious, exploring the human-dredged harbour as it might any natural inlet or fjord.
Indigenous people in what is now called British Columbia have always thought of orcas as relatives. This was not often the case for settler, secular empiricists like myself, whose view of orcas has changed substantially in recent decades. Those who once called them killers
now see them as near-kin. We now accept a biologist’s hypothesis of curiosity as a motivating factor for what seems to us non-orcas to be anomalous behaviour. This remarkable book takes us beneath the ocean to inhabit the world of the orca.
It also takes us among cultural viewpoints, featuring perspectives from Indigenous people, scientists and activists in British Columbia and around the world. The book includes works by contributors whose roots reach from the Hawai'ian Islands to the fjords of Haida Gwaii, from urban Africa to the coast of New Zealand, reflecting the diversity of relationships and perspectives humans around the world have about not only orcas, but animal rights, the fate of our oceans and human kinship with the rest of the tree of life. The powerful, personal introduction by Indigenous writer Nikki Sanchez, the book’s mastermind, is as bracing and wakening as a headlong dive into the deep green saltchuck.
Looking beneath the surface is what museums do. Whether that surface is the rippling skin of the ocean or the veneer of historical truth,
museums like to slip between one world and another to explore a very different reality.
Spirits of the Coast is a superb contextual companion to the Royal BC Museum’s 2020 feature exhibition Orcas: Our Shared Future, but it can be enjoyed on its own. The chapters are the product of immense and diverse talent, with contributions from literary, scientific and cultural luminaries.
I am gratified that this Royal BC Museum publication will be your anchor in a cultural, scientific and historical voyage, pulling you with gravity and grace into the orca’s world. When you resurface, I trust it will be with a new sense of wonder and appreciation for the orca, and a better understanding of our complex relationship with it.
Rainy Passage April Bencze
An orca travels through the territorial waters of the Haílzaqv Nation with their familial pod, 2015.
Introduction
Nikki Sanchez
Two years ago, my mother had a dream. In it, the Southern Resident orcas came to her and communicated that they urgently needed human help. They took her underwater and showed her their world; she swam with them and saw first-hand the conditions that were causing them to suffer, the reasons they were dying. They took her to the places their descendants had travelled and hunted for millennia, around the islands, straits, estuaries and secret coves. In the dream she felt the sonic assault of the marine tankers, the panic of the dwindling chinook, the chaotic accumulation of ocean debris and the contamination of the waters.
Our family was no stranger to grief at the time: the previous year, my mother’s husband had struggled to get through each day as his body was overtaken by a terminal illness. Maybe the dream was a manifestation of her grief, or maybe it was a reflection of the depth of her connection to our coastal orca kin. Either way, it moved her into action. Together with her intertidal friends and me, we put out a call to anyone concerned about the wellbeing of the local Resident orcas to come together. Within a few weeks, 30 of us gathered at an art studio on Salt Spring Island. Our group, made up primarily of women 20 to 80 years of age, spent the day talking about our concerns for the orcas and what we could do for them. The one thing everyone shared in common was their love for these whales and the awe they evoked in us.
We decided that it would be love and awe that guided our movement. We wanted to harness love rather than fear as the catalyst to call others into action, and in the end, we decided art would be our vehicle. We named the group Orca Soundings and set out to create an artistic representation of the orcas in the Salish Sea Resident population. I laugh to myself when I think of our early attempts to construct these models: though they were not quite lifesize, we wanted them to be big enough to draw attention, light enough to carry at public events, and made from natural materials so that their creation wouldn’t cause further environmental harm. I have vivid memories of bushwhacking along the rocky coast of Beaver Point to harvest gorse (Ulex europaeus), the first material we attempted to build our orcas out of. By the time we emerged from the deep underbrush, I was covered in prickles and entirely discouraged.
In the end, an environmental artist from Salt Spring Island created a model template for our orcas out of plywood and non-toxic paint. Then there were grandmother orca puppets made of willow and fabric, and a large number of elegant dorsal fins—one for each member of the Southern Resident orca population. Each orca was matched with a human advocate, someone who would carry their whale to marches, Earth Day celebrations and the like and tell the story of their individual orca with the hope of educating about the reasons their survival was threatened. At the time we created these models, the population of the Southern Resident orcas was 80.
At the time of this writing, that number has dropped to 73. I have no way of knowing how many will remain when you are reading this, but it is my profound hope—a hope that I know is shared by all who contributed to this anthology—that this work will be not a eulogy, but rather a celebration, a unification of many through our shared love to take action to ensure this orca population, analogous to all the marine species of our world, not only survives, but thrives.
However, I do not expect anyone to take action, make sacrifices, or fight for something they don’t love. So that is what this book is: an invitation to fall in love, in awe, with these incredible marine mammals, so that we can come together to protect them. And as you will learn in the pages to come, the survival of orcas—apex predators, just as humans are—is not distinct from our own.
This anthology brings together orca experts of every category, from neuroscientists-turned-activists to emerging Indigenous writers and artists who carry forward the sacred knowledge systems of their ancestors. The collection of voices spans ancient covenants of orca/human treaty, stories of the past, detailed legacies of the evolution of orca imagery in our collective imagination, and the most recent research regarding orca behaviour, communication and survival.
The inclusion and selection of art was regarded with the same care and consideration as were the written pieces—not art for adornment, but art as stories, reflections, invitations to wonder and with an imperative message in and of itself.
This anthology is divided into three sections: Connection, Captivity and Consciousness. Connection spans time and culture, from pre-colonial accounts of human/orca interdependence, governance and treaty with coastal peoples to the forging of human/orca relationships from within a settler worldview through the lenses of science, literature, music and media. The Captivity section tells the stories of an era of human/orca relations that were dictated by the flawed understanding of orcas as killers, commodities and insentient monsters from personal, scientific and cumulative perspectives. This section reveals the impacts of this worldview on both human and orca populations. The last section of the book, Consciousness, offers a window into a plethora of alternate imaginings of what a reciprocal path forward could look like.
In the formation of this book, we cast a broad net, with the intention of creating a collection of orca content as diverse as orcas’ impacts on our human experience have been, and equally powerful and poignant. What you will discover in the pages to come is a compilation of perspectives that together create a mosaic of how orcas have come to be known and understood in the current human zeitgeist. The work includes scientific studies, cultural records, oral histories, poetry, and visions of the past and future encapsulated through words, art and images. The inclusion and selection of art was regarded with the same care and consideration as were the written pieces—not art for adornment, but art as stories, reflections, invitations to wonder and with an imperative message in and of itself. The decision to make art a central element of this work was made because we knew that like orca forms of communication, not all knowledge can be shared through words. There has not been a single day on this project, which has brought together such a distinguished array of minds and imaginations, when I have not sat humbled by reverence—for the brilliant minds who have shared their passionate perspectives in this collection, but also for the orcas themselves, who have ignited the passion that is exhibited here.
As is repeatedly conveyed in the pages to come, despite the current neoliberal paradigm, we are not separate from our world. Nor can we remove ourselves from it in order to examine it. And thus, this anthology does not attempt to present itself as anything other than exactly what it is: a collection of human perspectives, reflections, experiences and testaments regarding our knowledge of and connection to the orca whale. The other side of this story remains to be told by the orcas themselves.
To reiterate what I stated above, because my elders have always taught me that when something is very important we must repeat it many times, it is my profound hope that this book will not be a eulogy, but a celebration, a call to action, an invitation to fall in love with our magnificent kin: the orca whales. May this book be a testament of love, accountability and commitment to standing up to ensuring that they, and we, have a sustainable path forward, a future worth striving for. May the generations to come tell the story not of our failure, but of our triumph that against many odds, we found a path to collective survival.
And with these words, I invite you to be a witness, a living record, a piece of this collective triumph of survival with our relatives, the orcas.
SGaana sGaanagwa
Supernatural Killer Whales
As told by
GwaaHanad Diane Brown, Ts’aahl Eagle woman of the Haida Nation,
to her daughter-in-law Kihlgula Gaay.ya Severn Cullis-Suzuki, Ravens of Tanu
This story was told to me by Hazel Stevens a very long time ago. In 1985, during the fight for Lyell Island, as a matter of fact.
The story is about two men from the west coast of Haida Gwaii who went fishing in their food gathering canoe. Not a big canoe, two men could handle it. So they went out. Meanwhile, a bad storm hit. They didn’t return. So the people started to mourn for them. They waited a year for them to come home, and when they didn’t come home in a year, they held a memorial, and put them away in a good way.
However, one year after that, someone was down the beach, and they noticed something way on the horizon. Then another person noticed. Then another person. Then pretty soon they started asking, what could it be? Soon they saw three shapes coming toward them on the horizon, and they still couldn’t figure out what it was. Finally it came right to the village. It was two killer whales guiding the canoe back, right to the same village where they left. So they got off, and everyone was rejoicing. They told the story of how they got caught in the storm, a bad storm, and they washed up in the land of the people that ate maggots. That was Japan—they ate rice.
And so they spent two years with them, they lived amongst them. But they got very, very homesick. So they started off home, on the same canoe. By nightfall, the thickest fog came. They could not see the stars. They thought they were doomed, because the fog just wasn’t moving. It was like that for a day or so, and just when they were ready to give up, they heard a xwshhhhhh, xwshhhhh. Here a killer whale came swimming up to them on one side of the canoe, and stayed. They paddled along awhile, and then they heard it again, xwshhhhhh, in the distance. Another killer whale came to the other side of them. The killer whales guided them right to the village. Right back to where they started from.
Hazel Stevens ended the story by saying, Those Haida men were young and strong, and they were there for two years, and you can’t tell me they lived by themselves! So I believe we have relatives in Japan.
That’s how she ended it. That’s the end of the story.
the killer whales
are very important to the Haida people.
There’s the Creator, who created all things, and then there’s the Supernatural Beings, and the head person of the Supernatural Beings is the killer whale. Next to God are the killer whales. That’s how important they are in the scheme of things.