No Chief Stands Alone
No Chief Stands Alone
INITIATION DRAFT — This page explains the Tsm̱syen principle that leadership is never individual. A chief’s authority exists only through the House, the matriarchs, the speaker roles, and the collective law (ayaawx).
Core Principle
In Tsm̱syen law, **no chief stands alone**. A chief does not rule by himself, speak by himself, or decide by himself.
His authority is:
- inherited through the matriline,
- upheld by the matriarchs,
- supported by House members,
- checked by feast protocol,
- guided by *ayaawx*,
- and verified by witnesses.
A chief standing alone would be a broken system — it would go against the foundation of the wilp.
Governance Structure
A chief’s strength comes from those around him:
- **Gyetk / sigyidm hana̱’a̱** — matriarch authority
- **Simgyaget** — hereditary name holder
- **Sgigithanauk** — senior supporting leader / protocol officer
- **Kubawiltsik** — House-level functional or work leader (to be expanded)
- **Wilp Members** — witnesses, helpers, supporters
- **Father and Grandfather Clans** — advisors and protectors
- **Youth** — carriers of the next generation of responsibility
Each person reinforces the balance so the chief cannot act outside law.
Matriarchal Authority
A chief’s decisions are **not final** without the approval of:
- the matriarchs (gyetk / sigyidm hana̱’a̱),
- the House mothers,
- the lineage women.
If the matriarchs disagree:
- the chief cannot proceed,
- the speech changes,
- the feast pauses,
- corrections are made.
This is ayaawx in action.
Feast Law
Inside a feast, a chief:
- **does not speak first**,
- **does not speak alone**,
- **does not decide alone**,
- **does not witness alone**.
Matriarchs set seating and confirm speeches. Speakers deliver words on behalf of the House. Guests and other Houses validate actions.
A decision without witnesses is **not law**.
Correction and Accountability
If a chief:
- speaks out of turn,
- breaks ayaawx,
- misuses a name,
- oversteps authority…
He is corrected by:
- the matriarchs,