Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

More whalers want to hunt

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

>From Georgia Strait article " B.C. Native Seeks Revival of Whale Hunt " by

Sid

Tafler

 

One day in the not-so-distant future, you may travel to Vancouver Island

not just to watch whales but, perhaps, to eat them.

Tom Happynook, heir to a Native whaling chieftainship, already has the

recipe book, the lavishly illustrated Mrs.Ohnishi's Whale Cuisine, written

in Japanese and English. He has the passion and drive to revive his

people's ancient whaling traditions, and, he says, he has the right to hunt

whales-anytime he chooses.

 

Happynook is also the founder and chairman of the World Council of

Whalers.

 

Happynook foresees whale meat in B.C. supermarket display cases, right

next to salmon steaks and oysters on ice.

 

But Happynook prefers not to discuss selling whale meat.

Asked how many whales the Nuu-chah-nulth would take if the hunt resumed,

Happynook says, " Initially, just one, " as Native people gradually grow

accustomed to whale meat again.

" A lot of our young people love hamburger, so we would introduce it as

hamburger meat. " But a Pacific hunt of one gray whale could grow to a

sustainable coastwide hunt of 1000, a whale sized harvest that would shock

those opposed to the resumption of whaling on this coast.

 

To Happynook, hunting and eating whales is.also probably about commercial

sale of whale meat, which he won't discuss but won't rule out, either. On a

shelf in his office is a cardboard box labeled " Western Canada Whaling

Company Quick Frozen Whale Meat " . This was a special order present given by

a friend as a joke, but with serious undertones. You can see where the

harvest of 30-tonne whales by Natives from a small village can easily lead.

Especially with all those eager diners filling the tables at Mrs. Ohnishi's

Restaurant in Osaka.

But the issue must surely be whether or not Native people have the right

and authority-moral and legal-to resume whaling, not whether or not they

sell their catch. Natives on this coast have always sold and traded their

surplus, and if they begin whaling again, they will surely find markets in

whale-hungry nations such as Japan.

Happynook and his fellow Nuu-chah-nulth leaders believe they have the

historical and aboriginal right to go whaling. But judging by the

experience of the Makah, their Washington State cousins, this right doesn't

equal a whale on the beach.

The Makah got the go-ahead from the U.S. government to hunt a gray whale

as of last Oct. 1, but by year end, dogged by animal-welfare activists and

rough weather, they were skunked.

Happynook says the Makah were " set up to fail " by U.S. authorities

talking out of both sides of their mouth. He says the Americans are among

the nations on the regulatory international whaling commission (of which

Canada is not a member) that are the most firmly opposed to whaling. They

walk the fine line between officially sanctioning the Makah whale hunt and

doing everything in their power to prevent it from succeeding, Happynook

says.

Through the threat of forfeiture of federal funding, they prevented the

Makah from joining Happynook's emerging world whaling body and from using

the expertise of the world's foremost authority on whaling weapons, Egil Ole

Oen, a Norwegian veterinarian who has developed an exploding harpoon that

can supposedly kill a whale in ten minutes or less.

 

By the same token, 1000 gray whales could be hunted every year, based on

Happynook's 4% sustainability formula and an estimate of 25,000 of the

migratory grays in the North Pacific. But he stresses that this is only a

theoretical figure, to be balanced by other considerations, such as the

overall health of the stock.

 

" We don't make quick decisions. There will always be Nuu-chah-nulth

whaling chiefs. When everyone else is gone, we'll be there. "

 

____

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...