'It's a symbol of our strength': Heiltsuk open first Big House in 120 years | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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'It's a symbol of our strength': Heiltsuk open first Big House in 120 years

The community is kicking off five days of celebration in Bella Bella, B.C. today and is expecting as many as 2,000 guests from as far away as New Zealand to join to attend. The Big House took 18 months to build and is constructed entirely of red and yellow cedar from the territory, including eight-ton and four-foot-wide logs with wood that was locally sourced and milled.
Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Charity Gladstone

BELLA BELLA, B.C. - Chief Coun. Marilyn Slett of the Heiltsuk Nation says it's hard to put into words the excitement and emotion she feels at the opening today of the first Big House in the territory in modern history.

The last Big House in the First Nation's territory along the B.C. coast was destroyed 120 years ago and the community has been planning and fundraising to build a new one for decades.

The community is kicking off five days of celebration in Bella Bella today and is expecting as many as 2,000 guests from as far away as New Zealand to join to attend.

The Big House took 18 months to build and is constructed entirely of red and yellow cedar from the territory, including eight-ton and four-foot-wide logs with wood that was locally sourced and milled.

Indigenous artists have been working for 10 years to design, carve and paint four house posts that tell the origin story of the Heiltsuk people.

Slett says the opening means the community now has an appropriate space for spiritual and ceremonial events like potlatches and the naming of babies, which had previously been held in a community centre.

"Going forward it's a symbol of our strenghth and our resilience as people. I know it's just going to make us stronger," Slett said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 13, 2019.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2019
The Canadian Press

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