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3 NARF Legal Rev. 1 (1975)

handle is hein.journals/narf3 and id is 1 raw text is: 







  Native Amria  RihsFn h*ainlIda  a  irr



ANNOU.C.A6. S


Volume 3, No. 1


January- March


                   THE FIFTH DISASTER -

The Colonization of The North Slope of Alaska


1975


  There is an American city at the
top of the world which is closer to
Leningrad than to Los Angeles -
closer to Istanbul than to Miami.
The city, called Barrow, is located
on the North Slope of Alaska, a
land without edges, full of winds
and silences. A land which is a
part of the people who have lived
there as long as any people in
North or South America - The
Inupiat Eskimos.
  The Inupiat - which means the
people - have survived four
disasters on the North Slope. They
are now in the midst of the Fifth -
the American colonization of their
homeland.
  Eskimo   legends   tell of


disasters, some of which occurred
thousands of years ago, others
less than 60 years ago. The First
Disaster was The Cold Eclipse -
a time when the moon covered the
sun and the Eskimo's homeland
turned from a very warm country
to frigid desert. The Inupiat, the
animals, the birds and the plants
froze. The legend says only four
families survived.
  The Second Disaster was The
Big Flood which followed a series
of terrifying earthquakes and
turned the mountains into an icy
plain - all but a few Inupiat
drowned.
  The Third Disaster came during


The Terrible Year of Two Winters
when the Inupiat could not get
food and died of starvation.
  The Fourth Disaster came after
the Inupiats' first contacts with
white men - men who brought
them The Terrible Sickness
during the flu epidemic of 1918.
  The Fifth Disaster is The
Taking of the Land    of the
Eskimos. And because the whites
are doing this, they may succeed
where all past disasters have
failed. The land is part of the
Eskimos. It cannot be amputated
- no more than the spirit can be
separated from any human being.
To take the land of the Eskimos is
to take their life.

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