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Indigenous Iñupiat People Madeline Hall Michaela Hernandez Michael Pryer Chris Ramirez. Iñupiat. The name "Inupiaq," means "real or genuine person”. Traditional clothing: outer and inner pullover tops (Parkas , Kuspuks / qiipaghaq ) Outer and inner pants Socks, Boots
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Indigenous Iñupiat PeopleMadeline HallMichaela HernandezMichael PryerChris Ramirez
Iñupiat The name "Inupiaq," means "real or genuine person” • Traditional clothing: outer and inner pullover tops (Parkas ,Kuspuks/qiipaghaq) • Outer and inner pants • Socks, Boots • Tops/Pants=Caribou Skin with fur • Fur faces inside on inner garments, outside on outer garments
Where do they reside? • Historically, Inupiat people can be found in North Western Alaska within the artic circle, but they also previously conquered the Circumpolar North(Canada, Siberia, and Alaska). • They are currently located all over the world. 1,820 Bering Strait Inupiat 3,675 Kotzebue Sound Inupiat 1,850 North Alaska Coast Inupiat 1,050 Interior North Inupiat
Demographics and Language • Barrow, (population 4,434) and Kotzebue, (3,107), are the region's largest cities where the population is mostly Inupiat Eskimo. • Alaskan Inupiaq includes two major dialect groups: North Alaskan Inupiaq and Seward Peninsula Inupiaq. • Alaska is home to about 13,500 Inupiat, of whom about 3,000, mostly over age 40, speak the language.
Houses and Settlement • Traditionally, homes are usually made from sod blocks, laid over driftwood or whale bone and walrus bone frames(dome-shaped). • Usually hold 8 to 12 people
Resources • Their lives evolve around the whale, walrus, seal, polar bear, caribou and fish. • Birds and Eggs are important part of diet.
Video Iñupiaq Whale Hunt http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LAqEK7K5oCQ
Traditional Tools • Variety of stone, wood, bone, and ivory • Bow Drill: starts fires, drills holes • Hunting equipment and tool kits are separate
Traditional Transportation • Umiaqis a large open skin boat, 15 - 25 feet long (carried up to 15 people) • Kayaks • Baset sled • Snowshoes
Cyclical annual activities and traditions Winter months with little to no sunlight Summer activities Fall harvest and preparations for winter Inupiat Cultural Patterns
Historically Rural • Traditionally and historically live in arctic tundra and sub-arctic areas • The only plants that thrive are small shrubs and lichen • Mammals that survive on land are compact and stocky to retain heat
Poverty & Wealth • Pre-contact Inupiat societies were stable with their own economic structure • Post-contact Inupiat societies have been impoverished • Social problems • Loss of culture • Apathy
Education • Western education ignores traditional Inupiat education and knowledge • Forced ‘special education’ programs • Mind vs. Body • Low motivation to complete education • Lack of tools/finances to go onto college • Urbanized and assimilated youth
War and Peace • Historically divided and at war within Inupiat society • Alliance and Conflict by Ernest Burch Jr. • Ten separate nations • Stereotype of docile and submissive Eskimos • Assimilation post-contact
Minority Status • Alaska Natives are 15% of the population within Alaska • Inupiaq are only a fraction of this number • With historical and ongoing assimilation culture is disappearing
Oppression • Children forced into boarding school system • Missionaries/Christianization • Enforced destruction of language and religion • Subsistence-restricting laws • Forced urbanization/modernization
Segregation/Forced Integration • Boarding schools • JOM program • Separate health care • Absorbed into growing urban centers and Missionary towns
Darlene Wilson Age 21 Juneau, AK September 2012
CURRENT ISSUES • WESTERNIZATION • URBANIZATION • Lack of education • Depression • Alcoholism • Domestic Abuse • Racism
IÑUPIAT & GLOBAL WARMING • Many Iñupiat people depend on subsistence living. • It is becoming harder to hunt the whales, seals, and walrus that are needed for survival. • http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/EXTSOCIALDEVELOPMENT/0,,contentMDK:21951825~pagePK:210058~piPK:210062~theSitePK:244363,00.html
Ontological What exist??? Roots in Animism Spirits Supernatural Existence
Epistemological • Reincarnation and recycling of spirit • Deceased members names given to newborns
Religious/ Spiritual Animism Natural Physical Entities Christianity Missions Holidays
Ethical Teachings • Relationship Reciprocal Responsibility Redistrubtion Respect Elder Care Community
Core Values/ Social Beliefs • Immediate kin • Endogamous • Kinship ties • Umialik • Extended family • Importance of children
Relation to Society • Manifest Destiny • Global Warming • Protestant Missions
Rituals/ Ceremonies/ Practices • Qargi club houses • North Slope Festival • Messenger Feast • Qatizut s
Sources • http://www.akhistorycourse.org/articles/article.php?artID=196 • http://library.thinkquest.org/22550/inupiaq.html • http://www.uaf.edu/anlc/languages/i/