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Guide to Indian Country
- June, 2000
Cultural ecotourism
- Ktunaxa style
Take in Alberta's southwest
Powwow - a healing experience
The do's and don'ts of powwow
Powwow etiquette
dictates respect for tradition
Painter believes "art
is us"
Experience the people
of a time long ago
Generations recorded
Can't travel? Try Native film
Summer solstice celebrated
in far North
Law student crowned
Miss Indian World
Escape to nature
Gathering of Nations
powwow biggest yet
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WINDSPEAKER'S ABORIGINAL TOURISM SUPPLEMENT
Phone: (780) 455-2700 Fax
(780) 455-7639
Email: edwind@ammsa.com
Cultural ecotourism - Ktunaxa style
By Troy Hunter
Windspeaker Contributor
COLUMBIA BASIN, B.C.
The Indigenous peoples known as the Ktunaxa Indians and often
referred to in history books and on maps as the Kootenay Indians
live in the Columbia Basin. The Columbia and Kootenay Rivers
lie within the traditional territory of the Ktunaxa Indian Nation
in British Columbia. It is this system of rivers, lakes and mountains
that has sustained the Ktunaxa peoples since time immemorial.
The traditional knowledge of the Ktunaxa concerning their territory
is quite remarkable and unique. Some families in the Ktunaxa
Indian communities have looked to their cultural lifestyles to
build upon a new activity, often referred to as ecotourism.
There are seven communities within the Ktunaxa Nation - the Columbia
Lake Indian Band, Kutenai Tribe of Idaho, Lower Kootenay Indian
Band, Salish/Kootenai/Flathead Indian Reservation, Shuswap Indian
Band, St. Mary's Indian Band, and Tobacco Plains Indian Band.
There are five Ktunaxa communities in Canada and two in the United
States. There was another Ktunaxa Indian Reserve near Burton
called the Arrow Lakes Indian Reserve, but because of a forced
move, it is now non-existent.
The Arrow Lakes Band was a mixture of Ktunaxa, Shuswap and Okanagan
Indians. They migrated between Washington and the West Kootenays
to fish, gather and hunt for food.
The Shuswap Indian Band is politically part of the Ktunaxa Nation.
This community is often referred to as the Kinbasket people,
which is a family name. The Kinbaskets immigrated to the territory
about 200 years ago. The primary language and culture of the
Shuswap Indian Band is that of the Secwepemc (Shuswap Indians).
Within the Ktunaxa Nation, there are two sub-groups that have
been classified as the Lower Kootenay and the Upper Kootenay.
The Lower Kootenay has developed specialized knowledge about
water resources for survival. This traditional knowledge includes
fish and waterfowl harvesting, as well as the use of plants associated
with water resources for such items as housing.
A unique feature of the Lower Kootenay is the use of the sturgeon-nosed
canoe. The canoe was traditionally made from using six different
types of trees - birch, white pine, cedar, maple, bitter cherry
and Douglas fir. However, most canoes being made now are a combination
of wood and canvas.
Today, canvas is the material of choice for making tipis. The
Lower Kootenay Band used to make summer dwellings out of reed
mats, and both groups used animal hides for covering their lodges
as well. Since canvas is a waterproof cotton material, it is
now preferred over the traditional coverings.
The Ktunaxa Tipi Company is a year-round operation owned and
operated by Wilfred Jacobs and his wife, members of the Lower
Kootenay Indian Band in Creston. They make sturgeon-nosed canoes
and tipis for sale and rental. Their tipis have attracted customers
as far away as Europe and Asia.
The Upper Kootenay Indians traditionally were a forest and mountain
people who adapted to prairie life when the need arose. They
existed by traveling on horseback throughout their territory,
hunting, fishing and gathering. Two or three times a year, the
Upper Kootenay would travel through the mountain passes often
in dangerous situations (due to neighboring enemies, such as
the Blackfoot Indians) to hunt for buffalo, which was once one
of the staple foods of the Ktunaxa Nation people. In their travels,
they would collect items such as the red ochre from the paint
pots at Kootenay National Park. This ochre was traded for parfleche
and cornhusk bags full of salt, which made its way from the Salt
Lake area of Utah. The Ktunaxa traded with many of the interior
plateau tribes, including the Nez Perce and Utes.
The Upper Kootenay obtained horses through this trading network
and were adept in horsemanship.
The Ktunaxa Indians had thousands of horses living in their territory
and up until the 1950s much of this stock was still in existence.
The last of the wild horses were caught and the ones that remained
on the reservations, such as St. Mary's Indian Reserve, were
killed off because the Ministry of Forests said the horses were
overgrazing.
Fortunately, there are still some horses remaining on the reserves
and there is even a trail ride operation at the Columbia Lake
Indian Reserve.
Alfred Joseph, a Ktunaxa Indian of the Columbia Lake Indian Band,
operates the JN Ranch near Windermere and is known for his guide
outfitting and daily trail rides. His customers include German
tourists. It is recommended to call ahead to arrange a trail
ride.
Dan Gravelle, with his wife Erin, of the Tobacco Plains Indian
Band operates the Circle-O-Ranch and have a few head of horses
for hire. They specialize in raising Texas long horn cattle.
A 29-par golf course called Set'etkwa Golf Course is owned and
operated by the Eugene family of the Shuswap Indian Band. It
is a seasonal course open until October each year. As well, the
Shuswap Band has opened another golf course. It is just off of
Highway 95 at the crossroads of Invermere and Radium Hot Springs.
They also lease a portion of reserve land to a helicopter company
that operates daily scenic tours of the Columbia Valley.
At the Columbia Lake Reserve you will find the Lakeside Resort,
a tent and trailer campground operated from May to October by
the Columbia Lake Indian Band. Activities are jet skiing, canoeing
and boat rentals.
The Lower Kootenay Outfitters Ltd. is owned and operated by Wayne
Louie of the Lower Kootenay Indian Band. He specializes in traditional
hunts for grizzly, black bear, mountain goat, shiras moose, whitetail,
cougar, geese and ducks and has summer pack trips.
Well before the Indian residential schools were established in
1886, the St. Eugene's Catholic Mission was started, about 1878,
by Reverend Father Fouquet, a Catholic priest of the Oblates
of Mary Immaculate. He built a small chapel for worship at Kootenay,
B.C., and the Ktunaxa people would gather there for religious
holidays to attend the Catholic Mass. After Father Fouquet came
Father Coccola, a Roman Catholic priest who wanted education
for the Ktunaxa children and asked the government for a school
to be built for the Kootenay Indians at the Mission. A residential
school was erected in 1912 built from Indian education funds
and was shut down in 1970. It is the largest historical building
in the region.
The present St. Eugene's Church was built in 1897 with proceeds
from the St. Eugene Mine at Moyie. Pierre Nickelhead, a Ktunaxa,
discovered the mine and through the Reverend and Father Coccola,
staked the mine; the St. Eugene's Mine was established.
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Year 2000 marks the opening of the Casino of the Rockies, with
18-hole golf course, interpretive centre and tipi village, all
at the St. Eugene's Mission. The project includes a strong cultural
theme. There will be a Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Interpretive Centre,
as well as an arts and crafts centre. Guests will have the option
of staying in a 24-unit tipi village, one of the 25 suites in
the resort, or in the 92-room lodge. The destination casino will
have up to 30 gaming tables and 300 slot machines. The casino
will open some time in the summer.
Chief Sophie Pierre of the St. Mary's Band was quoted in the
November 1999 edition of a newsletter for the Ktunaxa/Kinbasket
Tribal Council. Pierre states, "Getting final approval for
the Casino of the Rockies at St. Eugene Mission Resort has been
a long and thorough process." Chief Pierre continued, "We
are very pleased with this announcement which will allow us to
create hundreds of well-paying and lasting jobs for people in
our communities."
An Elder had said many years ago, "Since the culture of
the Ktunaxa was taken away within that building, it should be
within that building that the culture is returned." The
Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Interpretive Centre will be housed within the
St. Eugene's Mission.
The oral history of the Ktunaxa Nation includes the whole Columbia
Basin. Also, archaeology has been instrumental in documenting
more than 10,000 years of occupation. Every mountain, stream,
river and lake has been used and frequented by Ktunaxa people.
The Elders are the keepers of the knowledge and they are responsible
for passing that knowledge down to the younger generations. There
are many people within the Ktunaxa Nation that know the history
and traditional land-use patterns within their territory. It
is possible to acquire a Ktunaxa guide for a more rigorous and
exciting form of outdoor adventure.
The Ktunaxa/Kinbasket Tribal Council near Cranbrook should be
the starting point for hiring a guide, or alternatively, one
of the individual communities may be a source as well.
The phone number to the tribal council is (250) 489-2464 and
their fax number is (250) 489-5760.
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