Sts'ailes people
The Sts'ailes, also known as Chehalis are an indigenous people from the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia, Canada.
Their band government is the Sts'ailes Nation, formerly known as the Chehalis First Nation or Chehalis Indian Band. The band's name community is located on Indian reserve lands at Chehalis, which is on the lower Harrison River between the towns of Mission and Agassiz. Their band's mailing address is in nearby Agassiz.
Name
The name Sts'ailes means "beating heart", which became the name of their village, located on the west side of the Harrison River. Their usual English name, Chehalis, is identical to that of the much more numerous Chehalis people of southern Puget Sound in Washington. By Sts'ailes tradition, the southern Chehalis were separated from their homeland as a consequence of the Great Flood.Heritage
In Sts'ailes tradition, Xals, the Transformer, defeated a powerful shaman known as "the Doctor". Xals turned the shaman to stone, and broke the stone to pieces, spreading the fragments to prevent his return. The heart of the shaman fell on the shores of the home lake, and became the place where the Sts'ailes originated. There is evidence of this culture in the form of lithic and mortuarial practices going back at least 1500 years.There is evidence that the Sts'ailes people relied primarily on the salmon from the Fraser-Harrison watershed as their most important food source. Many of their religious ceremonies are derived from significant periods of the year important to the fishery.
While there is no modern link between the people and the Chehalis tribe of southwestern Washington, Sts'ailes heritage does speak of a flood that separated a southern portion of its people many years before.
The Sts'ailes have a rich and unique culture around visual arts and music.