When referring to Alaska and the Arctic Circle, people think about Igloo, Dogsled, and Eskimo. However, most people know that Eskimo most people say is actually a summary of three different groups. In order to understand the communities living in this area and to recognize their cultural differences, we have to look for two of them, the different groups living in this area: Inuit And Yupee. For the purpose of discussion, we focus on Inuit's life.
After graduating from college, I lived with Inuit people in Alaska and taught them organic gardening. In turn, the elders taught me how to live. Since then, my passion and calling has focused on celebrating the beauty of nature, paying attention to the complexity of the world economy. With that in mind, I will link my life as an artist with asserting that he is an officer of the Oceana and Stone Barns Food and Agriculture Center. I believe that our choice is important, from the food we eat, to the time and energy we use to make things other than the earth and all the inhabitants, humans, and humans.
For thousands of years, Inuit people lived a life without history. This has changed with the first contact with the Europeans. Viking under the Red Cross met an Inuit in Greenland in 984. About 600 years later, British explorer Martin Frobisher contacted Inuit in northern Canada. In 1741, Russian explorer Vitus Behring met an Alaska Inuit. At that time, it was estimated that about 40,000 Inuit people lived in Alaska, half of which lived in the northern inland or far northwest. Inuit people living under the Arctic Circle, Aleutes, and Native Americans were most affected by the initial contacts of Russian fur traders. However, due to the second round of the European invasion brought about by expanded whale trade, the people in northern Inuit were not affected much.