Monday, October 7, 2013

Location


The Inuit live in Arctic regions in Canada, Russia, Alaska, and Greenland. These environments are often harsh, with little resources. Because there are limited building materials in this environment, Inuit build circular houses, known as “igloos”, out of large blocks of snow in the winter. When it is too warm for snow in the summer, the Inuit live in huts made from animal skins. They often have two separate camps for winter and summer, where they follow the animals. It is very snowy for most of the year. Because of the harsh weather, not many people disrupt their daily lives, but it is also hard to leave or enter the community. For this reason, trade, health care, communications, and technology are limited to the Inuit. 

Resources:
National Aboriginal Health Organization

N.d. Inuit Background. Electronic Document, http://www.naho.ca/inuit/overview-of-inuit-                 health/inuit-background/


            Gardiner, Lisa
2007 Inuit Culture, Traditions, and History. Electronic Document,                                                     http://www.windows2universe.org/earth/polar/inuit_culture.html

Background



The Inuit are an indigenous tribe who live in harsh snowy climates. They mainly speak the Inuktitut language, which is common in the eastern Arctic. They are sometimes called “eskimos”, although some Inuit find this offensive. The Inuit get around by using sleds made from animal bones and skins pulled by dogs. They also use small boats for hunting and traveling over the water. Because few plants grow in the Arctic, the Inuit diet consists of mostly meat from whales, walruses, seals, and fish. Essential parts of Inuit culture are storytelling, mythology, and dancing.
The Inuit had little contact with anyone else prior to the 1940s. Traders would pass through on explorations or hunting trips, but few ever expressed interest in settling in the frozen Arctic. The invention of airplanes made it easier to cross the Arctic, and during the Cold War, the Arctic became an important location where enemy countries were able to be closer to each other. This led to the development of airbases, settlements, and other military bases to keep an eye on enemy countries. With these developments came schools and health care centers that changed Inuit life. Inuit children were forced to attend schools that promoted other cultural traditions. With more health care, the Inuit were able to live longer, and thus the population began to grow. Although they are no longer uncontacted, the Inuit still live relatively independently. 

Resources:
Gardiner, Lisa
2007 Inuit Culture, Traditions, and History. Electronic Document,                                                     http://www.windows2universe.org/earth/polar/inuit_culture.html