1950 Caribou Inuit famine

The 1950 Canadian caribou famine happened when a change in caribou migration patterns caused widespread death in the southern interior of the District of Keewatin, Northwest Territories, now the Kivalliq Region, Nunavut, in the west of Canada's Hudson Bay.[1] The resulting famine wiped out half of the impacted Caribou Inuit communities.

1950 Caribou Inuit famine
A traditional Inuit caribou parka made from the skin of a caribou with the fur on the outside, which shows one of the ways caribou provided for Inuit
CountryCanada
LocationDistrict of Keewatin, now Kivalliq Region
Period1950
Total deaths~60
An Inuit mother and child rubbing their noses together (kunik) in Padlei, Nunavut. Photographed by Richard Harrington in 1950

The Caribou Inuit were hunters of caribou in these regions and relied on caribou to supply food, shelter and clothing for their communities.The Caribou Inuit used caribou skin to make parkas to keep themselves warm in frigid climates.[2] They were very careful to make use of every part of the caribou, which was known to be very durable. Due to overhunting and a combination of changing migration patterns and herd distribution, the population of caribou in this region declined vastly.[3] During this time period, the Caribou Inuit were blamed for the declining caribou population, being faced with allegations of being wasteful and overkilling. In the early 1950s the Canadian media reported the starvation deaths of 60 Caribou Inuit.[4] The government was slow to act but in 1959 moved the surviving 60, of around the 120 that were alive in 1950, to settlements such as Baker Lake and Eskimo Point, now Arviat.[4] This set off an Arctic settlement push by the Canadian government where those Inuit living in the north were encouraged to abandon their traditional way of life and settle in villages and outposts of the Canadian North.[4] It was this time that in the former community of Padlei Richard Harrington took his iconic photo of a starving Inuit mother, pressing her nose and lips to those of her youngest child.[5] On February 8, 1950 a few days before Harrington wrote in his journal:

Came upon the tiniest igloo yet. Outside lay a single, mangy dog, motionless, starving ... Inside, a small woman in clumsy clothes, large hood, with baby. She sat in darkness, without heat. She speaks to me. I believe she said they were starving. We left some tea, matches, kerosene, biscuits. And went on.

— Richard Harrington[5]

After being relocated, the Caribou Inuit population never recovered with only a fraction of what once was being alive today. As a result, they have joined movements that call for the protection of their lands against outsiders.[6]

See also

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Bibliography

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Notes

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  1. ^ Rennie 2015
  2. ^ "Caribou Skin Clothing". National Park Service. August 19, 2021. Archived from the original on December 1, 2022. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
  3. ^ Usher, Peter J. "Caribou Crisis or Administrative Crisis? Wildlife and Aboriginal Policies on the Barren Grounds of Canada, 1947–60" (PDF). Environment and Society. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 3, 2023. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Bone 2013, p. 412
  5. ^ a b "Winnipeg show exhibits rarely seen images of 1950s Arctic famine". The Associated Press. December 5, 2009. Archived from the original on March 27, 2019. Retrieved December 2, 2023.
  6. ^ Cummins, Bryan (May 28, 2004). Faces of the North: The Ethnographic Photography of John Honigmann (Featured ed.). Toronto, Canada: Natural Heritage. p. 154. ISBN 9781459665569.

References

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