We use a few different terms in this video to describe indigenous people - including Inuit, Inughuit, and Inuk. If you’re curious to learn more about how to describe Inuit, take a look at this “Style Guide for Reporting on Indigenous People” from Journalists for Human Rights: jhr.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/JHR2017-Style-Book-Indigenous-People.pdf Thanks for watching. -Coleman
@TheRovW11 ай бұрын
E
@AhmadmaDJamAjam11 ай бұрын
...and a few different microphones
@JJONNYREPP11 ай бұрын
The tragic story of this famous meteorite. 19.1.24. how they parcelling off the meteor...?
@beefweiner11 ай бұрын
who's the Rasist who wrote and spoke on this video??
@skavengerr11 ай бұрын
Can you make a video about the skulls of Algerian resistance fighters that france stores in the basement of a museum!
@OnyxLee11 ай бұрын
OMG, I just took my daughter to see it the past weekend, and the weekend before. We heard two different guides telling us all about how heavy it was, how difficult it was to transport it to the museum, and all about the rainbow color columns to support it at the office downstairs. Nothing about the tragedy was ever mentioned... Thank you so much for bringing this history to light.
@robertcarveth872211 ай бұрын
It was open game to steal from native people, Glad to see that native peoples of the world are demanding their cultural items back!!
@onthewater402011 ай бұрын
Keep in mind that those guides likely are not told about the true history of that artefact.
@Canada1235611 ай бұрын
I got the black stone too when I touch it I can feel now who try to destroy the world and take faking to save it
@Rob-cm9jr10 ай бұрын
The true history of existence is so vastly different from fact that you would assume that this is a different dimension if you knew the truth. Almost everything you know is a lie. Even aspects you would give your life to protect. I am the Hebrew repeater. I never forget. I will never forget. I am not constrained by spacetime and Einsteins fullish notion of locality.
@grimmertwin214810 ай бұрын
Beware taking your children to museums. After Disney World it's where most children go missing 😮
@realNoMee11 ай бұрын
It really can't be understated how infuriating it is that all of this was done just so a rock could sit in a room for people to gawk at.
@thecompanioncube421111 ай бұрын
The arrogance of humans when we even know the history we fail to do even a small gesture to acknowledge
@brightBoss11 ай бұрын
Yep the rock that served better purposes as iron tools for indigenous people
@selaucurry605811 ай бұрын
@@brightBoss I think the indigenous people, in this case, got the better part of deal : modern guns and tools for a rock. I mean that rock was insignificant compared to the trade they got for it
@einienj328111 ай бұрын
He could've bought a chunk of it for people to look at it in a museum, but nooo...
@iampavel11 ай бұрын
It shows how humans are selfish and only do things for their own benefit.
@luiscristianfloresgarcia831911 ай бұрын
I remember going to the museum as a child and falling in love with the meteorite Never in my wildest dreams did I think this was stolen from a people along with the bodies of innocent humans who lost their lives for absolutely nothing It’s true there is 0 mention of of the people who were kidnapped And I’ve been going to the museum since I was 5 years old and now I’m 30 It’s sad really really sad
@buizelmeme628811 ай бұрын
Idk why, but This comment should deserve some feedback 😢
@FLPhotoCatcher11 ай бұрын
There are many things that scientists did over the decades that they don't want us to know. They kidnapped native people from Australia and caged them in zoos! And I'm sure that they did other reprehensible things that have not come to light. It was not just a couple people who were doing these things. And they did not do it without the approval or knowledge of the scientific establishment either.
@ArcticAirUltraPro11 ай бұрын
Yes and this is how erasure is a major aspect of colonialism, and how to shape peoples psychology to leave out important information. Why it is important to tell these stories and for museums to do the work to decolonize or repatriate items back to their ancestral owners, or to at the very least create a positive relationship with
@roflomaozedong11 ай бұрын
everything not local from museum in france/england/usa are like this. Stolen , pillaged, fruits of rapes or worse
@R0YB0T11 ай бұрын
It was not stolen, their own people helped him move it. He gave them tools and guns for it that were a lot better then what they had. The kids family died of disease which was common at the time. We didn't have penicillin until 40 years from then.
@MTemil11 ай бұрын
I really appreciate these kinds of critical videos that force us to reckon with the history and actions of the past that have shaped the ways we live today. It's a stark reminder not to fall blindly for imperialist lies, and how even something as seemingly innocuous as a chunk of rock has had real human costs.
@limbeboy711 ай бұрын
I find it funny when white ppl deflect stories like this today when we haven't even told 56% of the horrible stories of what they did. Remember: history is written by the Victor. Guess who that is?
@441rider11 ай бұрын
The English still will not return Greece's Elgin marbles.
@donnavorce885611 ай бұрын
And, so armed with better understanding, to step in front of despicable acts being committed in real time, today. The indigenous tribes in South America are living with similar encroachments, land stealing, murder, harassment, lies, and everything else the resource hunters can do. We might be able to get it stopped.
@HobbyOrganist11 ай бұрын
Of course not, and set back where they were the weather and acid rain will continue to destroy them anyway so what would the point be? Most of those carved panels were smashed and damaged, heads broken off, corners broken, and the region is earthquake prone big time too.
@MTemil11 ай бұрын
@@HobbyOrganist i have news for you my friend, countries outside the UK and US do in fact also have museums.
@spencerh142811 ай бұрын
This needs to be a movie.
@z3et11 ай бұрын
After the return of the meteorite.
@Northeast_Atlantic11 ай бұрын
Exactly my first thought while watching
@thecrowfliescrooked11 ай бұрын
The meteor should stay right where it is with a redesigned display telling the whole story. You can't fix the past by "sending everything back" . Doing that is selfish and only makes you feel warm and fuzzy for the moment but you loose the opportunity to educate the future.
@henhen789011 ай бұрын
Yeah they should just keep it at this point and just compensate the Inuit people they took it from. They needed it for the iron, but there's better ways of getting them iron/steel and tools today. Just leave a note on the museum description saying it was unethical and don't do this again. Also for anyone who wants to see the opposite happening check out the Chinese Art Heist by Kento Bento.
@matt69nice11 ай бұрын
@@thecrowfliescrooked that should be a decision for the people who lost part of their culture and heritage. You don't need trophies to educate people either way. It's not for us to decide that it's better for other people/cultures for us to keep our trophies so we can educate our own people. We need to do better at educating people without needing to steal physical items.
@JackWaParker11 ай бұрын
Honestly, I love visiting museums, but museums need to do a better job of being transparent and showing integrity. Items that were taken improperly need to be returned, or if applicable, compensation needs to be paid to the people these items were stolen from.
@seangt11 ай бұрын
that's basically 100% of the items in museums.
@echewta11 ай бұрын
Are you usually not honest?
@IAMAliIbrahim11 ай бұрын
If Western museums start doing so half of them would be empty
@JackWaParker11 ай бұрын
@@seangt Not modern art museums, aviation museums, national heritage museums, etc. So, much less than 100%
@JackWaParker11 ай бұрын
@@echewta Honestly, I lie all the time. You?
@henriquesbio11 ай бұрын
The museum needs to acknowledge this story on their gallery, engage with the Inughuit and if they want the meteorite back, give it back.
@TeraGreene111 ай бұрын
Exactly ❤
@XCHDragox11511 ай бұрын
The timing of this video can't be better. We in Nunavut just went through a historical moment where the Canadian government returned the land back to the Inuit. Things are improving bit by bit Edit: thanks for calling me out on the spelling.
@strangerpainter11 ай бұрын
Still not enough. Greenlanders are now suffering from climate change and lack of seaice. Another thing that white people created.
@benayers862211 ай бұрын
can i come stay pls? uk is in a mess!
@TheAlchemist108911 ай бұрын
@@benayers8622we don't want more immigrants Especially British
@eveneeee11 ай бұрын
@@benayers8622Are you really ready for the arctic? 😅
@The_ZeroLine11 ай бұрын
But still refuse to stop the serial killers preying on First Nations women.
@jhatt113911 ай бұрын
Good journalism that addresses human rights violations.
@R0YB0T11 ай бұрын
What human rights violations?
@CrappyBJJBlueBelt11 ай бұрын
And human trafficking!!!!
@Seroxm1310 ай бұрын
@@R0YB0Tare you a bot? Typical. Just watch this video.
@monkeybars10110 ай бұрын
They voulenteered to go. They werent taken. 😅 The museum adopted the ophan boy. So they did keep their promise. No humans right violation...
@ARHanif-ej7oz10 ай бұрын
@@monkeybars101still trying to justify their actions?
@ekolimitsLIVE11 ай бұрын
Man. I seen this meteorite dozens of times and appreciate this hidden insight to its nature. Shame on who ever was in charge that would not grant this man his father’s remains.
@Canada1235611 ай бұрын
I got the black stone too when I touch it I can feel who try to destroy the world and faking to save it
@halfbloodprincess98910 ай бұрын
It's heartbreaking that Minik didn't even express anger when talking about the museum, he just said "give my fathers body back, so I can give him a burial" and they denied it.
@dreamersdisease24815 ай бұрын
Very evil of them
@notquitestranger11 ай бұрын
It's a story many of us here in Greenland already know about, but I'm really glad that it is told in such an informal way. Thank you! Side note: Your pronunciation is good!
@francesbernard244511 ай бұрын
Greenland is not the only nation where that kind of unethical thing was being done after scientists during the late 1800's saw chromosomes being replicated in cells. Scientists some of whom regard Galileo as their hero while believing that he was an atheist which he is not.
@felip344211 ай бұрын
this Peary guy seems like a true villain
@sayedmahbub893311 ай бұрын
He was. He lied about reaching North Pole and climbing Mount Denali.
@logravl512211 ай бұрын
true soab.
@henhen789011 ай бұрын
As terrible as he is he's probably not as bad as other people during that time. He was a spoiled rich kid after all.
@satviklodha521911 ай бұрын
Wait till you hear stories of how the British looted almost ever country in the plant😅
@imjustsaying665611 ай бұрын
Every European “explorer” was pure evil. Would lie to natives use them then betray them in the worst way possible.
@blatantmistakes11 ай бұрын
Pieces like these is why I follow this channel, an incredibly meaningful piece that was worth every minute of my time
@bookoobucks11 ай бұрын
sure, this what journalism differ from reporting, they don't report but make us experience story.
@nina.k66611 ай бұрын
I know there's probably no correlation but "Minik" means "small, tiny" in Turkish and is a term of endearment. Which breaks my heart even more. Poor Minik.
11 ай бұрын
There are a couple more words and meanings that correlate between the two languages. ‘Ana’, your word for mother or matron could be closely related to our ‘anaana’, and ‘aanaa’ means grandmother. I grew up with Turkish immigrant kids in Denmark, so we sort of established that at some point. I’ve never dived into a thorough research of the linguistics, though.
@nina.k66611 ай бұрын
Wow, that's so interesting because the word "anneanne" (which is a modernized form of "ana" x2) means maternal grandmother in Turkish too! I've read on Wikipedia that "Minik" corresponds to some kind of oil in Greenlandic Inuit, so I didn’t want to get too ambitious :)
@abylai8kerim11 ай бұрын
kayak also in qazaq meaning kaiyk қайық very similar
@andis259511 ай бұрын
minik deserved so much more in life
@ZedtixuS11 ай бұрын
dude reincarnated named 'Mikki'.
@monkeybars10110 ай бұрын
He could have stayed in Greenland and been a fisherman.
@monkeybars10110 ай бұрын
It's his dad's fault for forcing him over.
@Achillez09811 ай бұрын
"Then an American explorer hungry for fame and fortune..." This is our world's equivalent of "then the Fire Nation attacked"
@AlaiasAlias11 ай бұрын
That's Imeprial Japan, brush up your history plz.
@fireflymiesumae11 ай бұрын
Yep
@royalanempire29658 ай бұрын
It can be both. @@AlaiasAlias
@dreamersdisease24815 ай бұрын
I thought it was the British
@dreamersdisease24815 ай бұрын
Japanese internment camps were like one long summer camp.
@--Paws--11 ай бұрын
In the 1900's Coney Island had held an exhibition of Filipinos to be displayed while in the Bronx Zoo a Congolese family; this is as egregious if not worse.
@2008MrsKim10 ай бұрын
I just googled your story, My stomach turned learning that all walks of life, except for the caucasian race was caged and marked upon as entertainment. Every single minority was put in a cage called human zoos. It is the most appalling thing I’ve ever witnessed on the Internet, most unreal and truly unforgivable.
@tedbomba663111 ай бұрын
I have been to the Museum of Natural History countless times and have always visited the meteorite display. I've marveled at the sheer size of that specimen, but never really gave a thought about how it was acquired. This story is yet another example of how many of the artifacts in museums around the world were literally stolen from the rightful owners of them. I stopped going to museums years ago when I began to understand how my financial support was helping to underwrite the theft of new acquisitions. This video is helping to educate people about the traffic in stolen items and its impact on the rightful owners.
@UXtatic11 ай бұрын
With every 'acquisition', there's a story.
@kathypiazza722824 күн бұрын
CBC Gem (Canada) has a tv show called “Stuff the British Stole” if you’re interested in more stories like this one.
@IvanEngler11 ай бұрын
this film should be shown on a screen just next to the meteorite in the museum!!
@mtpro241211 ай бұрын
People hate on British Museum but almost all the museum have a very bad past.
@t84t748748t611 ай бұрын
wel back than u don't get a collection of rare items by being friendly
@Zeus.thunder11 ай бұрын
We have a toilet museum that's pretty dank
@randangbalado11 ай бұрын
*western museum
@colematthews664011 ай бұрын
@@randangbaladovery important distinction. Non western Museums can’t steal what rightfully belongs to them.
@micahbonewell599411 ай бұрын
The British museum was the most successful museum during the time in which museum's had the least ethics. It was the Victorian and Edwardian periods when a lot of these abhorrent actions were taken, and that is when the British were world superpower. Doesn't mean they were the only ones to commit these actions, just that the committed the majority of them.
@sh.a.333311 ай бұрын
We need more documentaries like this to learn about history. Your work is high quality and great, thank you Vox!❤ And RIP Minik and the other Inuit tribe members who tragically and unfairly lost their lives 💔
@Canada1235611 ай бұрын
I got you I got black stone magic but everybody against us
@jnmwtkns11 ай бұрын
As a 50 year old American I find more daily to be so embarrassed about. It is no wonder parts of the world don’t look upon Us as anything other than Raiders and thieves. Thank you for this history lesson and humbling. At the very least these people should be completely compensated as much as possible anyway.
@metamon270411 ай бұрын
Much of Europe and other more 'civilized' cultures have done the same over the centuries. (Especially the English who were probably the worst in that regard)
@HobbyOrganist11 ай бұрын
They WERE compensated with items in trade, the people there in 1897 are LONG dead, and today there's guns, swords, knives and a lot of readily available everywhere.
@HobbyOrganist11 ай бұрын
The English "found" the Parthenon and decided to tear all the carved panels off it to take home where they still are @@metamon2704
@jnmwtkns11 ай бұрын
@@HobbyOrganist i guess I should have been more specific about compensation. I was thinking more about the history of what happened to alot of them and who was responsible. Public humiliation goes along ways. Almost as much as public praise for stealing from the people who didnt know any better .
@zein922711 ай бұрын
@@metamon2704 Sure, makes it totally legitimate.
@maheshprabhu11 ай бұрын
When you go to any museum and you see an item there that does not belong to that country, you know it very likely has a dark history. I wish museums were more open about the history of how they came to possess such items.
@jorgemonterrosa1711 ай бұрын
Agreed 100 %.
@Anson12011 ай бұрын
Now everyone knows why the Sentinelese natives are so agressive towards strangers. Cause depraved things like this always happen. They are smart.
@gladitsnotme10 ай бұрын
Agreed, it makes me sad that their island will probably be flooded underwater within the next 50 years by people they've never met doing things they've never seen.
@ComradeCatpurrnicus11 ай бұрын
Tragic is an understatement, this is horrifying.
@adelinada11 ай бұрын
thank you, vox. more people need to know these stories. and museums have to do so much better.
@ivanh.7111 ай бұрын
Amazing reporting. Amazing story. Stories like this NEED to be publicized.
@dukesanddaggers11 ай бұрын
The meteor is one thing, but it's more tragic that he led them away from their homeland to be experimented on. Imagine the life they could have lived if they never left.
@anzolomyer458411 ай бұрын
What an amazing video. It felt like watching a movie, just much more condensed. I had no idea about any of this stuff, and find it kind of shocking that so many photos and drawings exist. It makes you wonder how many noteworthy stories have happened throughout time that you'll never know about....
@gugly811 ай бұрын
You don't know because you weren't the victims. People always ignores colonised people tales & but believe only from your own kind only. 99% of such stories don't get to people, because they don't such people seriously. Which is the truth.
@danielvazquez292311 ай бұрын
Love this. Keep exposing museums that stole their exhibits.
@noahdegraaf862511 ай бұрын
the actions of the museum and the explorer in this instance are sickening.
@timages11 ай бұрын
The truly heartbreaking part is this tribe welcomed Peary and his men with kindness and hospitality. The same way the Taino tribes welcomed Columbus. And this history is now banned in parts of this country.
@Canada1235611 ай бұрын
I got black stone when I found it and touch it I can feel now who try to destroy the world and faking to save it watch out
@davinbrown307211 ай бұрын
That is literally horrible!! the end of the video had me crying😢
@BariumCobaltNitrog3n11 ай бұрын
That's an odd way to use literally.
@triedzidono11 ай бұрын
weak emotions and no to low IQs use it, but don't know its literal meaning, Hi Dave. @@BariumCobaltNitrog3n I treat it like the stripes on a wasp, fair warning not to continue.
@guyhiebert11 ай бұрын
This is very infuriating. A reputable institute that will not and still does not say sorry. The museum should do " Their ' do diligence of how the item was acquired. I know back in the day, but seeing how this story was researched the Museums should right the wrongs the know are wrong and not have to have it told by others. Though not a crime then and a crime now does not mean it can be ignored. So Thank you to this KZbin Vox storyteller truth teller
@jehhuty11 ай бұрын
Well... It's really NOT a reputable institute.
@Latin23mx10 ай бұрын
Yeah I concur… it puts the status of reputable in question. And that’s the only one we know about!
@aerith11910 ай бұрын
This video will be a much better reminder of them than a plaque in the museum.
@coht1210 ай бұрын
This is truly heartbreaking. Despite their remains being returned, Minik wasn't there to witness that and he passed, broken. Imagine being a friend with or know someone who justified the "scientific purpose" with regards to people stealing from another group of people "to prove a point".
@wolf1723811 ай бұрын
What a sad story. What that explorer did was despicable, truly sickening.
@HobbyOrganist11 ай бұрын
The museum was supposed to take care of them, the museum failed
@monkeybars10110 ай бұрын
Well, they did voulenteer. Also, within days they all got sick. Hardly the museums fault. Definatley not Pearys fault.
@AnirbanDas2198911 ай бұрын
This is so sad. The museum should at least issue a public apology to those six people.
@OhGodisaLiar11 ай бұрын
Apology? No apology can undo the evil that has been done! It’s not accepted. Get rid of these evil museums!
@HobbyOrganist11 ай бұрын
They are all dead, they don't care about apologies...
@monkeybars10110 ай бұрын
Apologies for what. They voulenteered to join them on a trip back to us and they they got sick. What do you want the museum to say?
@shanghunter769710 ай бұрын
@@OhGodisaLiar Exactly !
@cganimation414911 ай бұрын
I TRULY TRULY ADORE how every other english word is used to get around murder stealing theft... crimes.. in such factual essays
@davidredjoy11 ай бұрын
Thank You Vox. We need more of these. We too need to relearn our history.
@isaacmartinez690411 ай бұрын
Every time I hear Robert Peary, I remember him going to the North Pole with Matthew Henson, the first African-American to travel to the North Pole.
@リンジ-f3d11 ай бұрын
I have been going to AMNH since I was in second grade, over twenty years ago now, and even volunteered on-and-off, and later worked there for eight years, and I have never heard this before. I always appreciate these in depth videos that shine a light on often overlooked and explained-away injustices.
@rainers.208011 ай бұрын
This story is one of the saddest ones I've watched on KZbin. Amazing that the meteorite or at least part of the revenue that the museum makes from it isn't given to the people who inhabit the area where Peary took it from. Shame on the museum.
@zachwilson76811 ай бұрын
Poor Minik, even at the time people knew how horribly he and his kin had been treated.
@DonaaldTrump11 ай бұрын
Keep up the awesome content Vox!
@justinforlini529311 ай бұрын
Amazing reporting. Such a sad story. Thank you for this content.
@Missmethinksalot111 ай бұрын
This was so well made, and so eye opening. All museums seem to be complicit in shady procurements.
@yak48111 ай бұрын
From now on, I will always think about how some artifacts were acquired when I visit a museum. Absolutely one of the dimensions of the artifacts that shouldn't be ignored.
@SteelDown11 ай бұрын
But you still will visit. You still will pay them and they still will keep taking others objects. You feed them.
@yak48110 ай бұрын
@@SteelDown You’re assuming that I will go see something knowing that it’s there, exhibited. We’re all going to consume things not realizing that it’s acquired or created in an unethical way. Bottom line is that it’s would be more meaningful to the consumer if the consumer is aware, and that is a critical responsibility of the members producing what is being exhibited or shared to the public.
@SteelDown10 ай бұрын
@@yak481 Excuses..... you want change but are not willing to change.
@littlerelief502911 ай бұрын
I'm going to leave these observations here as a museum worker, that also works in collections with repatriation programs .. and visited the locations in the upload. Musuems, while heading to returning these stolen people, generally won't acknowledge this on signage due to: not putting photos of deceased individuals (for religious reasons) OR ... The legal ramifications of starting to acknowledge past practices which means that they'll have to return most of their stuff Human remains and artifacts are more likely to be returned over natural resources because of the 'significance' assessment, and museum ethics indicates flora/fauna is classed different from human impact (hurting people by affect/human remains). Ultimately they decide on if things can be returned to a museum of the same level (care, conservation) and if not, it's kept as a 'long term loan' and the individuals of that community have 24/⁷ access .. but that doesn't extend to remains, remains need to be returned and only returned if their community can be identified and given back exactly that community needs. I'm white, I have no cultural ties to country but is next generation want everything we can give to fix what even our parents generation have done to harm. It's just hard that we have legal hurdles because it's deceased people, but if we want change hard enough, we'll walk so the next generation to run.
@olgaperez470510 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this heartbreaking story so their stories and the wrongdoings are not forgotten.
@jcfh1998111 ай бұрын
I’m reading the 1986 book mentioned in the video. It is heartbreaking.
@rhiannablumberg480311 ай бұрын
Wow what a devastatingly horrific story... but thank you Vox for this upload. 😢😢😢
@gavinkerslake10 ай бұрын
this information I didn't know anything about. thank you. fascinating.
@icywavs11 ай бұрын
The untold sides of history are what the world needs the most with how things are currently going. Thank you for this amazing video, Vox. May Minik and his family rest in peace.
@3d9e11 ай бұрын
when the ends justify it means, especially when you hide the means from the receiving ends. There will be heaps more of this kind of stories even happening now, we just never heard of them until it becomes a history.
@greenspiritarts10 ай бұрын
This story is an excellent example of how we, as a community of diverse cultural backgrounds are growing in our awareness of how insensitively things were done in the past. We NEED these stories to be told far and wide so we can learn from our mistakes and not repeat morally criminal behaviors in the way we live now and in the future. This is an excellent teaching story and should be used in schools to show how values of the past differ from values of the present. Also, the re-shaping of our collective responsibilities will make it easier to apply pressure to reluctant institutions who resist the repatriation of stolen artifacts…. I’m looking at you, The British Museum! Now is the time to use 21st century 3-d scanning and printing to replicate the originals. Then artists and craftspeople can be employed to paint and duplicate the exact appearance of the originals, which can then be retuned. EVERYONE ought to be able to support such programs where cultural thefts have occurred in the name of “science”. All of this is part of our global human evolution…learning how to respect and value ALL forms of cultural diversity.
@rmr196211 ай бұрын
I've gone to this museum my whole life and I was always interested in this meteor. I guess I should not be surprised that it was stolen. There are also lots of weird dioramas and realistic sculptures of indigenous people. The vibes are kind of off.
@TutuBhau11 ай бұрын
Such videos are what we long for
@dalenbickenbach953311 ай бұрын
Thanks, a good use of KZbin by the public and inspired individuals to provide knowledge.
@robertgaithuru420010 ай бұрын
Thank you for these stories Vox. It's why I love your channel.
@SceneComparisons11 ай бұрын
I totally see a movie of this story where Stephen Root plays a ruthless member of the museum who refuses to give the corpse back to Minick
@meldavis187711 ай бұрын
Wow your video is very educational and so interesting it had me captivated from start to finish I had to subscribe and look forward to more interesting content.Thankyou for sharing much appreciated 😊🙏
@timmccarthy991711 ай бұрын
A sobering reminder that science is an ideology. It's one I almost completely agree with, but it's guiding principles and values - that the secrets of the world can and should be explored; that objective evidence and experiment are the best ways to acquire knowledge and should supplant any others - have been used to justify desecrating corpses. Scientific ideology, however much I like it, should have its limits.
@erzsebetkovacs252711 ай бұрын
Indeed, and not coincidentally, nineteenth century was also the time when the alleged contradiction between science and religion was fabricated in the name of the same ideology and hegemony. We're still living post-nineteenth century, as it were, where science is the only universally accepted truth, and this makes it so hard to see that sometimes even science can be (and were) used to justify unjustifiable actions.
@dee190111 ай бұрын
Thank you Vox for this eye opener story ..
@rubenlasen756611 ай бұрын
This is so good!!
@Alexanderhamilton8710 ай бұрын
That’s a heartbreaking story! Thank u for uploading
@zakkufication11 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video. It is important to highlight the exploitation done in the name of science. Science should be done ethically.
@rudytexas682511 ай бұрын
While in today's arena the woke crowd might not see the great this did . It is something Americans should be proud of great American explorers.
@ananas_anna11 ай бұрын
Based on the thumbnail I though the meteorite landed on the person’s head 💀
@VikashGupta_i11 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this
@surrealist197611 ай бұрын
Inughuit is north canadian alaskan Inuit, its in their language that says Inughuit, in Greenland we call ourselves Kalaallit, Inuit. The correct word for Saviksue is Savissivik, Minik was studying to become a dentist, and went to the museum to research, found his family. Send him to spiral down, he became criminal, as a mobster group, wanted dead or alive in America, he and his friend were blind passengers to a ship to Greenland. His life was sad, he forgot the mother language, he forgot to hunt....
@AndyHinesTV11 ай бұрын
This was incredibly well done
@Nedski42YT11 ай бұрын
This not the only confrontation the American Museum of Natural History had about a meteorite and Indigenous people. The museum has the Willamette Meteorite on display. It was claimed by the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon. They eventually worked out some sort of legal agreement.
@janelletames916011 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank u so much for that information. So very sad.
@georghauer781111 ай бұрын
At minute 1:50 you depicted a wrong map of the polar circle. The polar circle does not pass through mainland Iceland. It’s a small error, but as VOX is probably equally geeky about maps as myself, I’m sure that you’ll appreciate the correction.
@arxllano11 ай бұрын
You just taught me something new. Thanks for the insight!
@lisaenglert320211 ай бұрын
Very well done and I’m glad you have expose and talked about this issue. A tragedy indeed.
@saffronlight4682011 ай бұрын
I love Vox Missing Chapters. They're incredible.
@gxguy290611 ай бұрын
This is the type of story that Hollywood should be making instead of all those remakes and changing characters that make no sense but you know what, they won't because we are the bad guy here. What a shame!
@fuchion1511 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you Vox for educating us on this. This was extremely heavy but necessary for more people to know.
@PardeepSihag11 ай бұрын
Thank you team VOX for introducing us with this story....
@d.b.467111 ай бұрын
Sidebar: this isn't the only meteorite that the AMNH "acquired" this way. The Willamette Meteorite was taken from western Oregon, where the local tribes consider it to be sacred. (They've reached an agreement with the tribes since then, but the historical context doesn't change.)
@Dineshkumar-jf2hz4 ай бұрын
Great documentary 👏
@TheReubenShow11 ай бұрын
That museum was my church. I knew they stole the meteorite, but never knew how greasy the whole affair was.
@drlemon772911 ай бұрын
@@brandonstockton7852no it didn't watch again. He only asked one dude for the location.
@TheFeldhamster11 ай бұрын
@@brandonstockton7852even if it had been traded for, those trades back then were never eye to eye. In all those trades, the indigenous people always ended up with a couple of trinkets while something much more valuable was taken from them. Yes, a couple of good guns and a supply of ammo might have seemed a good deal in the short term, but once the ammo runs out, those guns become worthless. While that huge meteorite would still be a source of metal for them today and we're 100 years later now.
@sebsmith510011 ай бұрын
Great reporting
@heberlopez494211 ай бұрын
This video is so important :( thank you Vox team for such a compelling piece of journalism
@marshaltito723211 ай бұрын
I can't even imagine how many stories like this exist. The shear human cost of imperialism is unfathomable.
@sammartens109011 ай бұрын
This is horrible. Thank you for telling this story
@oneidawolf77611 ай бұрын
What a terrible story. This wasnt that long ago and atrocities kept happening to indigenous people to this day. Thanks for telling the story Vox.
@brickmack11 ай бұрын
Its tragic what happened to these 6 people, but I just don't see any problem whatsoever with the meteorite. Sounds like the tribe got a very good deal out of it. All involved were well-paid in tools and resources vastly more useful than a chunk of unrefined metal. They clearly had no significant cultural/religious attachment to it as they were willing to locate, dig up, and load it onto his ship with no coercion and apparently no real haggling for it. And they had no ongoing need for raw metal since they were already getting that mostly from outside traders by this point. Its a much fairer-sounding trade than most native-European trade of this period
@Ruddline11 ай бұрын
Yes good post, this story is intended to rabble rouse and not truly real, its not brazen thievery it was just a explorer guy trying to get something cool for some trade and taking some friends with him to britain to see sights and tragedy struck.
@ikeyshuster980111 ай бұрын
Love this type of content
@FelixBibian11 ай бұрын
Glad to see Vox go back to making informational content
@parameciumbrains11 ай бұрын
It's too bad this video only told the sad parts of his story and none of the other parts. In other words, the story is overly slanted. Would have been nice to learn about his friends, like the Hall family, Tanqueray, or William Wallace’s son. It also did not talk about how he like being a lumberjack or how he liked living in America more then Greenland after he got back to Greenland. Also, for anyone who tried to read the newspaper clipping at 7:26 below is the text. Lieut Peary's six Eskimos, who were taken to Bellevue Hospital on Saturday night, five suffering with influenza and one, Ahtungahnaksaah, otherwise Mrs. Nooktur, with pneumonia, are feeling better for their medical treatment. The last is still in a very serious condition. The main trouble in dealing with the Eskimas seems to pe sudden homesickness due to their illness. At their quarters in the Museum of Natural History they were apparently happy and contented until these colds took hold of them. As soon as they found that they we were unwell, they became sulky worried. When they bega.. to cough, despair seemed to seize them, and it is this mental condition that makes their cases very difficult for the doctors of Bellevue to handle. Besides this, it is very difficult for a New York doctor to find anything either in
@dh536311 ай бұрын
I'm sure you can do a video like this on every single item at any Natural History museum
@metamon270411 ай бұрын
The asteroid part sure, the human tragedy is what sets this apart - it involved abducting people, dissecting them and then refusing to release their remains for 100 years.
@teebosaurusyou2-un2nz11 ай бұрын
And still every day we all know about so many millions of poor people around the world slaving in mines, swamps, dumps, wreaking yards and forests, etc.
@R0YB0T11 ай бұрын
Yeah but it feels better and is a lot easier to virtue signal about stuff from 120+ years ago
@sethschmidt956911 ай бұрын
Nuktaq is one of the characters names in the legend of Korra
@ShawnLH8811 ай бұрын
Man I just can't get over how great the quality of vox videos are
@Davidc3111 ай бұрын
Thank you Vox for sharing these missing chapters, since they will never teach this in school
@jamiesprinkbob11 ай бұрын
its so cruel how uiskassak knew that he was not treated appropriately but did not think to bring an orphaned child home with him