Inuit religion
Inuit religion is the traditional religion of Inuit people. It is practiced within Inuit communities in parts of Chukotka, Alaska, northern Canada, and Greenland. The tradition has no formal leadership or organizational structure and displays much internal variation.
Traditional Inuit theology encompasses a range of deities and spirits inhabiting the Arctic and Sub-Arctic landscapes. Humans are regarded as having two souls, one of which can journey out of the body. Historically, an important role was played by ritual specialists known as angakut, who mediated between humanity and the spirits. They performed rituals for healing, to recover lost objects, or to assist the hunt. Hunting was traditionally a crucial part of Inuit subsistence, and is informed by various religious taboos. The use of amulets and the observance of various taboos have also been important parts of Inuit tradition.
Inuit were first exposed to Christian Europeans in the 16th century. Over the following centuries, Christian missionaries made efforts to proselytise among Inuit communities, and by the mid-20th century most Inuit had formally converted to Christianity. This process resulted in the substantial decline in the angakut and various other Inuit traditions. From the 1970s, there was a renewed movement to encourage Inuit pride and celebrate traditional culture.
Definition and classification
inhabit a stretch of the Arctic and Sub-Arctic region encompassing the northeast tip of Asia and much of northern North America. This includes the Russian province of Chukotka, the American state of Alaska, northern Canada, and the island of Greenland. They often self-identify under a range of regional names, often reflecting their own dialects. The Yupik people of Alaska are sometimes considered culturally distinct from other Inuit, but consider themselves to be Inuit for political purposes. The Inuit are also closely related to the Aleut people of the Aleutian Islands.The term Inuit means "the human beings".
Inuit have historically also been referred to as the Eskimo. This term likely derived from a Mi'kmaq language term meaning "the eaters of raw flesh" and was subsequently widely adopted by Europeans. By the early 21st century, the term Eskimo was largely rejected as derogatory, with Inuit favoured in its place.
Inuit religion has been characterised as being highly individualised. It has been informed by the difficult natural conditions in which Inuit live. Historical documentation of these traditions comes largely from Christian missionaries and explorers as well as anthropologists active since the late 19th century.
Beliefs
Jakobsen noted that the Greenland Inuit's belief system "derives from a holistic view of the visible and the invisible existing side by side".Theology
Among the Copper, the Sea Mother is called Arnakapshaluk.The veneration of the sea mother was spread from northern Alaska through to eastern Greenland. Nuliajuk, the Sea Woman, was described as "the lubricous one". If the people breached certain taboos, she held marine animals in the basin of her qulliq. When this happened, the angakkuq had to visit her to beg for game. In Netsilik oral history, she was originally an orphan girl mistreated by her community. Because of their inland lifestyle, the Caribou have no belief concerning a Sea Woman. Other cosmic beings, named Sila or Pinga, control the caribou, as opposed to marine animals. Some groups have made a distinction between the two figures, while others have considered them the same. Sacrificial offerings to them could promote luck in hunting.
Moon Man, another cosmic being, is benevolent towards humans and their souls as they arrived in celestial places. This belief differs from that of the Greenlandic Inuit, in which the Moon's wrath could be invoked by breaking taboos.
Sila or Silap Inua, often associated with weather, is conceived of as a power contained within people. Among the Netsilik, Sila was imagined as a male. The Netsilik believed Sila was originally a giant baby whose parents died fighting giants.
Below is an incomplete list of Inuit deities believed to hold power over some specific part of the Inuit world:
- Agloolik: evil god of the sea who can flip boats over; spirit which lives under the ice and helps wanderers in hunting and fishing
- Akna: mother goddess of fertility
- Amaguq / Amarok: wolf god who takes those foolish enough to hunt alone at night
- Anguta: gatherer of the dead; he carries them into the underworld, where they must sleep for a year.
- Ignirtoq: a goddess of light and truth.
- Nanook: the master of polar bears
- Pinga: the goddess of strength, the hunt, fertility and medicine
- Qailertetang: weather spirit, guardian of animals, and matron of fishers and hunters. Qailertetang is the companion of Sedna.
- Aipaloovik, an evil sea god associated with death and destruction
- Sedna: the mistress of sea animals and mother of the sea. Sedna is known under many names, including Nerrivik, Arnapkapfaaluk, Arnakuagsak, and Nuliajuk.
- Silap Inua or Sila: personification of the air
- Tekkeitsertok: the master of caribou.
- Tarqiup Inua: lunar deity
- Pukkeenegak: Goddess of domestic life, including sewing and cooking.
Among Copper Inuit, this "Wind Indweller" concept is related to spiritual practice: angakkuit were believed to obtain their power from this indweller, moreover, even their helping spirits were termed as silap inue.
Inuit religion holds that human illness can be caused by offending the spirits. Fear of retribution from spirits results in caution so as to avoid offending them. To help prevent causing offence, Inuit have observed various rules and taboos, have offered prayers and songs, worn amulets, and consulted their angakut specialists.
Scarcity of game animals is for instance often attributed to breaches in traditional observances and can be remedied through reconciliation with the animals or their indwellers.
Knud Rasmussen asked his guide and friend Aua, an angakkuq, about Inuit religious beliefs among the Iglulingmiut and was told: "We don't believe. We fear." Authors Inge Kleivan and Birgitte Sonne debate possible conclusions of Aua's words, because the angakkuq was under the influence of Christian missionaries, and later converted to Christianity. Their study also analyses beliefs of several Inuit groups, concluding that fear was not diffuse.
Other-than-human persons
Inuit beliefs also involve a range of other beings whose existence is not accepted by modern scientific investigation. The anthropologist Erica Hill suggested that these entities could be described as "other-than-human persons", a term originally devised by anthropologist Alfred Irving Hallowell.A belief in similar entities can be found across the Inuit world, from the Yupik in the west to Greenland Kalaallit in the east.
Among the Yupik, dangerous water-based entities included the human-shaped kogat which dwell in lakes and the palraiyuk which live in swamps. Posing threats on land is the tisikh-puk, a large worm with a human head, while the qununit have seal bodies and human faces, with holes in their hands or shoulders. In many cases, Yupik people have identified specific areas of the landscape where they believe such non-human entities live.
- Ahkiyyini: a skeleton spirit
- Aningaat: a boy who became the moon; brother to Siqiniq, the sun; sometimes equated to the lunar deity Tarqiup Inua
- Aumanil: a spirit which dwelled on the land and guided the seasonal movement of whales
- Qallupilluit: monstrous human-like creatures that live in the sea and carry off disobedient children.
- Saumen Kar: also called Tornit or Tuniit are Inuit versions of the Sasquatch or Yeti myth. They may be the people of the Dorset culture who were said to be giants.
- Siqiniq: a girl who became the sun; sister to Aningaat, the moon
- Tizheruk: snake-like monsters.
Mythology and cosmology
Some people starring in unipkaaqtuat or unikkaaqtuat include:
- Kiviuq: a wandering hero.
- Uumarnituq and Aakulujjuusi: the first Inuit, who created childbirth, womanhood, and death.
Souls and ''Anirniit''
The Caribou have a dualistic concept of the soul. The soul associated with respiration is called umaffia and the personal soul of a child is called tarneq. The tarneq is considered so weak that it needs the guardianship of a name-soul of a dead relative. The presence of the ancestor in the body of the child was felt to contribute to a more gentle behavior, especially among boys. This belief amounted to a form of reincarnation.
Dreams are generally deemed to have religious significance, for instance sometimes having a prophetic quality. According to ethnographic accounts from the Polar and Labrador Inuit, a recurring belief was that ghosts and spirits may visit a person through their dreams.
Inuit religion maintains that a free soul travels to the afterlife after bodily death, but that if death taboos are not observed then their free soul may become a ghost and remain in the vicinity of the living.
Ghosts were often thought to take the form of fire, sometimes perceived as a ball of fire.