Recorded statements from Elders and knowledge holders

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Recorded Statements from Elders and Knowledge Holders

Recorded statements from Elders and Ts’msyen knowledge holders are valuable records of guidance, memory, and interpretation under *ayaawx*. They are preserved to support learning, continuity, and protection against loss — **not to replace living authority or fix law permanently**.

This page explains how such statements are recorded, understood, and safeguarded within Ts’msyen law.


Foundational Understanding

Elders and knowledge holders carry law through lived experience.

Their statements:

  • transmit understanding of ayaawx
  • clarify responsibility and protocol
  • recall adaawx and precedent
  • guide interpretation in context
  • teach restraint and balance

Recording preserves voice, not supremacy.


Purpose of Recording

Statements may be recorded to:

  • prevent loss of knowledge
  • support teaching and learning
  • provide reference during review
  • protect against misrepresentation
  • assist continuity across generations

Recording is a support tool, not a source of authority.


Authority Remains Living

A recorded statement:

  • does not become binding law on its own
  • does not override future Elder guidance
  • does not exhaust meaning
  • does not remove the need for witness
  • does not replace feast-based affirmation

Authority remains with living Elders and lawful process.


Consent and Context

Statements are recorded only with consent.

This includes:

  • clarity about purpose and audience
  • respect for limits on use or sharing
  • understanding of cultural and legal context
  • ability to withdraw or correct

Consent is ongoing, not one-time.


Individual Voice and Collective Law

A recorded statement reflects:

  • the voice of the individual speaker
  • their experience and role
  • their understanding at that time

It does not automatically represent:

  • all Elders
  • all houses
  • all clans
  • final interpretation of law

Collective law arises through process and witness.


Review and Correction

Recorded statements remain open to:

  • clarification
  • correction
  • contextual explanation
  • supplementation by others

Correction honours the speaker and strengthens law.


Relationship to Adaawx

Recorded statements may:

  • reference adaawx
  • explain how adaawx guide conduct
  • provide teaching about responsibility

They do not replace adaawx or authorize retelling beyond protocol.


Use in Education

Recorded statements may be used for:

  • teaching youth
  • language and cultural learning
  • illustrating principles of ayaawx
  • supporting understanding of governance

Educational use must respect limits and attribution.


Use in Governance and Dispute Resolution

Recorded statements may inform discussion.

They:

  • provide memory and perspective
  • assist deliberation
  • do not decide outcomes
  • do not substitute for lawful authority

Decisions remain grounded in living process.


Protection Against Misuse

Recorded statements must not be:

  • selectively quoted
  • taken out of context
  • used to override others
  • treated as fixed rulings
  • cited as external authority

Misuse weakens both the speaker and the law.


Storage and Stewardship

Recordings are stewarded with care.

Stewardship includes:

  • secure storage
  • clear attribution
  • access controls where needed
  • respect for restrictions
  • community oversight

Custodianship does not confer ownership.


Relationship to Written Records

Written summaries or transcripts:

  • assist accessibility
  • must preserve meaning
  • should note limits and context
  • do not replace oral authority

Where conflict exists, living guidance prevails.


Teaching Humility in Use

Those who listen to recorded statements are taught:

  • to listen with humility
  • to seek clarification
  • to avoid finality
  • to respect living authority

Listening is an active responsibility.


Living Continuity

Recorded statements support continuity when:

  • they remain connected to living law
  • they are reviewed and renewed
  • they are used with care and restraint

Elders speak into the future, but law remains alive only when it is lived.