Inuit hunters blame cruise ships as narwhal disappear


Climate change, summer tourism and pollution are compromising Greenland's Inuit communities' traditional way of life, one of which is hunting narwhal. – AFP/The Groenlands Naturinstitut handout, October 11, 2023.

TO hunt the narwhal, whose long tusk was the unicorn horn of mediaeval myth, you need absolute silence, so much so that the indigenous hunters of the Scoresby Sound in eastern Greenland forbid their children from throwing pebbles into the water lest they spook the spiral-tusked whales.

Taught to hunt by his grandfather, Peter Arqe-Hammeken, 37, tracked narwhal during the brief Arctic summer, saying sightings of the animals were getting rarer.

In the fjord brimming with icebergs, the quiet of the hunt was broken by new arrivals – cruise passengers rushing to see Inuit culture before it was too late.

This summer, around 60 vessels ranging from sailing boats to large cruise ships arrived at the village of Ittoqqortoormiit at the mouth of the fjord system – the largest in the world – in the month when it was free of ice.

While some viewed Arctic tourism as a means to reinvigorate the remote community around 500km from the nearest settlement, others worried it could destroy the last surviving Inuit hunting societies.

“A week ago there were hunters out there, trying to catch narwhal. But there were a couple of ships going into them,” Arqe-Hammeken told AFP, who said cruise ships were scaring off the wildlife.

“When they come to the village, it’s okay. But when they come to the hunting ground, that’s not good.”

In the swiftly warming Arctic, where temperatures are rising up to four times faster than the global average, the Inuit are threatened at every turn.

Vanishing hunting grounds

“Hunters live from hunting here. They have kids,” said Arqe-Hammeken, who was born and bred in Ittoqqortoormiit and feared for their traditional way of life, of which narwhal meat is a key part.

“Narwhal are very important for the community” and for Greenland food culture, said teacher Jorgen Juulut Danielsen, a former mayor of the village, with “mattak” – raw narwhal skin and blubber – a traditional delicacy.

The Inuit hunt the toothed whales with harpoons and rifles under strict quotas, with the once lucrative export of the tusks banned since 2004.

But climate change was squeezing the narwhal’s habitat and scientists warned they would disappear totally from eastern Greenland if hunting was not banned.

Numbers have fallen so much that hunters could not find enough to reach the quota in 2021.

Weaker ice because of warming was also making it difficult to stalk seals – another staple of the local diet – at their breathing holes in the ice.

“There’s no ice now when before there was ice the whole year,” said Arqe-Hammeken, looking out to sea from Ittoqqortoormiit.

His grandfather used to regale him with tales of catching seals just outside the village. Now hunters must journey deep into the fjord to find them.

“Thirty years ago there were a lot of hunters. Today there are only 10 or 12,” said Arqe-Hammeken.

Pollution from afar

Nothing grows on the barren tundra, and with cargo ships only making it through the icy fjord once a year “it’s important we get (our nutrients) from the animals we hunt here locally”, said Mette Pike Barselajsen, who runs the local travel agency Nanu Travel.

“What we hunt is very important for our culture,” she said, with traditional clothes like polar bear trousers and sealskin kamik boots still used for hunting and for religious ceremonies.

But in July, a study in the Lancet Planetary Health found the villagers had some of the world’s highest concentrations of cancer-causing PFAS in their blood from eating seal, narwhal and polar bear, even though they live far from the sources of the pollution.

The “forever chemicals” from trainers, waterproof clothing, carpets, fire foam and pesticides are carried north on ocean currents before mounting the food chain to the Inuit.

With so much against them, some hunters are shifting to fishing halibut to supplement their income, Danielsen said. Others are turning to tourism.

Last-chance tourism

Ittoqqortoormiit and its colourful houses could hardly be more scenic, perched on a rocky peninsula overlooking the mouth of Scoresby Sound surrounded by glaciers.

Its once quiet paths were filled with groups of cruise tourists snapping pictures of polar bear hides hanging from the houses.

“One wonders how people live here,” said Christiane Fricke, a tourist from Germany, drawn like many to experience the traditional culture before it disappears.

Many hunters were already guiding tourists or taking them dog sledding.

“It’s a huge help for the hunters to have income from tourism as well,” Barselajsen said.

But others are afraid the cruise ships were making hunting unfeasible.

Danielsen, the former mayor, admitted there was conflict between those eager to embrace tourism and those who feared it could erode indigenous culture, especially hunting narwhal.

“Tourism definitely poses a threat to the traditional way of hunting and fishing in Ittoqqortoormiit,” geographer Marianna Leoni of Finland’s University of Oulu, who knows the village well, said.

But the authorities were “desperately looking for any sort of opportunity to keep the village alive”, she told AFP.

Tourists pay up to €20,000 euros (RM100,278.58) for the cruises, with almost all of the money going to foreign companies, so the Greenland government introduced a cruise passenger tax so locals received a share of the windfall.

But with the charge less than €7 per tourist, the Inuit are not getting “much in return”, Leoni said. – AFP, October 11, 2023.


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