The haietlik ( Nuuchahnulth: ḥiʔiiƛ̓iik; "lightning serpent") is a lightning spirit and legendary creature in the mythology of the Nuu-chah-nulth (Nootka) people of the Canadian Pacific Northwest Coast. According to legend, the haietlik is both an ally and a weapon of the thunderbirds, employed by them in the hunting of whales. They are described as huge serpents with heads as sharp as a knife and tongues that shoot lightning bolts. A blow from a haietlik injures a whale enough that the hunting thunderbird can carry it away as prey. [1] The haietlik is variously described as dwelling among the feathers of the thunderbirds to be unleashed with a flap of the wings, [2] or inhabiting the inland coastal waters and lakes frequented by the Nuu-chah-nulth people. [3]
Because thunderbirds are said to use the haietlik essentially as harpoons, the lightning serpent is commonly associated with whaling in Nuu-chah-nulth culture. Whalers who carry the skin of this mythological creature in their canoe are said to have luck in whaling. [3] British sailors visiting the Pacific Northwest in 1791 reportedly saw representations of the haietlik painted on the sides of canoes. [4] Images of the haietlik also appear in petroglyphs on the coast of British Columbia and as decorations on whaling harpoons. [5]
The haietlik also serves a ceremonial purpose in Nuu-chah-nulth rituals. One part of the ceremony for a marriage between a chief's daughter and the son of another tribe involves men of the groom's tribe arriving in a haietlik formation – their canoes formed up in a line, moving in a zig-zag pattern around the cove – before landing and distributing blankets as gifts to every member of the bride's tribe. [6] Another marriage ceremony involves dancers in haietlik masks entering the house of the bride's family. [7] The Nuu-chah-nulth wolf ritual – an initiation ceremony in which initiates are performatively kidnapped by men in wolf masks, taken into the woods, and taught important dances – also references the haietlik. One of the masks used in this ceremony simultaneously represents both a wolf and a lightning serpent, [8] and one of the dances taught to the initiates is a thunder dance in which a haietlik-dancer (hinkiic) enters a house through the roof. [9]
The Canadian Forces' 442 Transport and Rescue Squadron badge features a red haietlik in a Northwest Coast art style. [1]