“No Chief Stands Alone”

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No Chief Stands Alone

INITIATION DRAFT — Ayaawx Law page describing the principle that a sm’oogyet (chief) carries authority only through the House and never as an individual ruler.

Core Principle

In Tsm̱syen ayaawx, **no sm’oogyet stands alone.** A sm’oogyet (also spelled sm’oogyit) is not a ruler but a **speaker and representative** of the wilp. His authority comes from the name he carries and the **collective strength** of the House, not from himself.

Without the House, the matriarchs, the clans, and the witnesses, a sm’oogyet has **no lawful power.**

Why a Sm’oogyet Cannot Stand Alone

A sm’oogyet:

  • does not “own” the name,
  • does not make decisions alone,
  • does not speak without instruction,
  • does not act without the House’s support,
  • and does not control the wilp.

Any sm’oogyet who acts alone:

  • breaks ayaawx,
  • risks łoomsk (dishonour),
  • puts the House at risk,
  • and may require correction (ha’lidzap).

The Role of the Matriarchs

The matriarchs (sigyidm hana̱'a̱) are often described as:

  • the backbone of the wilp,
  • the moral authority,
  • the teachers of youth,
  • and the final word on internal matters.

If the matriarchs do not support a decision,

    • the sm’oogyet cannot proceed**, no matter who he is.

Supporting Leaders

A sm’oogyet is supported by:

  • the speechmaker or speaker (sgigithanauk),
  • House assistants,
  • ceremonial carriers,
  • advisors,
  • respected elders,
  • and youth trained in protocol.

These roles distribute responsibility so that no single person carries the weight.

A sm’oogyet’s authority flows *through* the structure, not above it.

Witnesses Give Legitimacy

Nothing becomes lawful without witnesses.

A sm’oogyet speaking or acting alone — with no witnesses — holds:

  • no weight,
  • no verification,
  • and no standing under ayaawx.

Witnesses anchor decisions so they live beyond the moment and beyond the individual.

In the Feast House

Inside the li’ligit or luulgyit:

  • a sm’oogyet does not rise alone,
  • he does not speak without prompting,
  • he does not speak before higher-ranking Houses,
  • all movement is guided by protocol,
  • and he appears in unity with his wilp.

A lone sm’oogyet speaking out of turn **disrupts the law** and shames the House.

Responsibilities of the Sm’oogyet

A sm’oogyet must:

  • listen to the matriarchs,
  • carry the House’s words accurately,
  • maintain relationships,
  • show restraint,
  • uphold łoomsk (honour),
  • and correct mistakes quickly.

His strength is measured not by volume or authority, but by humility and accuracy.

When a Sm’oogyet Violates This Law

If a sm’oogyet acts alone or against the House:

  • matriarchs intervene,
  • the wilp may remove speaking privileges,
  • correction (ha’lidzap) may be performed,
  • a Soup Feast may be held to repair harm,
  • or, in severe cases, the House may consider whether the name should remain with him.

This protects the name — not the man.

Modern Relevance

Today, this principle prevents:

  • misuse of colonial-style “chief status,”
  • individuals representing a whole nation without House backing,
  • political behaviour that ignores ayaawx,
  • and outsiders misunderstanding Tsm̱syen governance.

A sm’oogyet represents the wilp, not himself, not a political office, not a government job.

Summary

A sm’oogyet stands **with**:

  • the matriarchs,
  • the House,
  • the clans,
  • the witnesses,
  • the elders,
  • and the youth.

Never alone.

Notes

INITIATION DRAFT — Will expand with House-specific teachings and historical examples of collective leadership across Tsm̱syen territories.