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Caption: Ainia Nooshoota prepares chunks of narwhal meat that were caught by hunters in Clyde River. The meat was then brought to feed people 750 kilometres away in Iqaluit, by the Qajuqturvik ...
When Joanasie Illauq, a 75-year-old hunter living in Clyde River, reflects on how Inuit life has changed in a few short decades, his TB evacuation in the 1960s is the first memory to come to mind.
Greenlanders in recent years have been embracing pre-Christian Inuit traditions like drum dancing or getting Inuit tattoos.
They range from guided hikes with Inuit storytelling and discussions with locals on life in the North to Arctic char fishing using traditional techniques.
NUUK, Greenland — Sitting on the pelt of a polar bear hunted by her family, Aviaja Rakel Sanimuinaq says she’s proud to be part of a movement of Greenlanders reclaiming their Inuit traditions ...
Created by Inuit storytellers and filmed in Iqaluit, it’s as authentic as it is hilarious. My wife and I are always hunting ...
"The Inuit World is a robust and holistic reference source to contemporary Inuit life from the intimate world of the household to the global stage. Organized around the themes of Physical Worlds, ...
Book Review Myths of the Inuit find new life and a new generation David James Nov 3, 2024 ...
Some Inuit in the Canadian Arctic are angry at a British woman's claims to have been the first woman to cross Baffin Island alone.
When Joanasie Illauq, a 75-year-old hunter living in Clyde River, reflects on how Inuit life has changed in a few short decades, his TB evacuation in the 1960s is the first memory to come to mind.
Greenlanders in recent years have been embracing pre-Christian Inuit traditions like drum dancing or getting Inuit tattoos. For some, it’s a way to proudly reclaim their ancestral roots. But it's ...