Sign up for our email newsletter to receive in-depth, independent reporting that illuminates our region.
Bruce Inglangasak watches the wind and water from a cabin at Shingle Point in Canada. Depending on which way the wind is blowing, the sea ice could be pushed up against the shoreline, making it difficult or impossible to continue boating to Alaska from Canada. Inglangasak works as an ecotourism guide in Kaktovik, Alaska, when he isn’t subsistence hunting.
A stove in a Shingle Point fish camp cabin in Canada.
Mary Ruth Meyook, her mother Nellie Arey of Aklavik and Carol Oyagak of Kaktovik, play cards at Shingle Point fish camp in Canada.
Fireweed on Pascal Road in Aklavik, Canada.
A brown bear at the dump in Aklavik, Canada. The word Aklavik means “barren-ground grizzly place.”
Mary Ruth Meyook and Nellie Arey pull in fishing nets at Shingle Point fish camp in Canada.
Beluga whale dries outside of the home of Brenda Benoit in Aklavik, Canada. Aklavik, like Kaktovik, is a traditional subsistence whaling village.
Tori Inglangasak gives Brenda Benoit and other relatives goodbye hugs before leaving Aklavik.
Family photos hang on the wall in the home of Walter Inglangasak in Aklavik. The Inglangasak family, like many Indigenous families in Kaktovik and the far North, span the U.S.-Canadian border.
Bert Gordon hunts voles outside Bruce Inglangasak’s home in Kaktovik before loading up the boat and heading to Aklavik.
Bruce Inglangasak and Herman Oyagak go to high ground to look for a way to pass through the sea ice that is close to the shore.
Tori Inglangasak and her boyfriend, Bert Gordon, take a nap as they wait for sea ice to move away from the shoreline so they can begin their boat trip to Aklavik, Canada.
The coastline of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from the Beaufort Sea, as seen from Inglangasak’s boat on the way to Aklavik from Kaktovik, a 350-mile journey that Inglangasak and his family make twice a year.
Tori Inglangasak, excited to see her relatives, sits on front of her father’s boat to greet the family waiting on the shore of Aklavik, Canada.
Arctic char boils over a fire at the home of Walter Inglangasak, Bruce’s father, in Aklavik, Canada.
Walter Inglangasak plays solitaire in his home. His grandparents originally came from Wainwright, Alaska, but left for the Yukon when they realized that there were no more caribou on the North Slope.
In Walter Inglangasak’s home, photos show his son, Bruce, running around a truck to get away from a polar bear. Each year, tourists from all over the world travel to Kaktovik to accompany Bruce Inglangasak or one of the other local guides, as they watch the polar bears at the bone pile outside of Kaktovik.
Oftentimes in the Arctic, Inuit family histories stretch across national borders. The Inglangasak family once lived in Alaska, but changes in game patterns eventually brought them to Canada. They now call the tiny village of Aklavik home. The hamlet, which is located on the far northern shore of Canada’s Northwest Territories, housed 1,500 residents until erosion from floods left it unfit for building. So another development was started to replace it, about 40 miles to the east. Almost 50 years later, however, 600 residents, including the Inglangasaks, remain determined to keep their old community alive. They have even coined a new town motto: “Never say die.”
Another subsistence whaling village lies on the same shore 350 miles to the west, on land that became part of Alaska in 1906. It is to this village, Kaktovik, that Bruce Inglangasak came to work as a tour guide who specializes in the region’s polar bears.
Photographer Brian Adams first met Bruce Inglangasak on a polar bear tour in 2013, when he was working on his first book, I am Inuit. The 62-year-old guide has been in Kaktovik, Alaska, for 17 years, and finds great joy in adventuring with ecotourists. Still, twice a year, he’s drawn home to Aklavik, across the Beaufort Sea, by his siblings and cousins. In the winter, he is able to traverse the frozen rivers by snow machine, but in the summer, he travels by boat along the thawed seashore. On this particular trip, he brought along two friends who were helping their son move back to Aklavik, as well as his daughter, her boyfriend and a cooler full of muktak from a bowhead whale.
This project is the start of Brian Adams’ newest body of work, which will document the Inuit people of the circumpolar regions of Canada, Russia and Greenland.
—Luna Anna Archey,High Country Newsassociate photo editor
Our articles are available for republishing, but images are only available on a case-by-case basis. You can’t republish photographs or illustrations without written permission from High Country News and/or the photographer. Please reach out to syndication@hcn.org to request illustrations and photography for specific stories.
Republishing guidelines
Credit the author and High Country News - We prefer Author Name, High Country News at the byline. At the top of the story, if on the web, please include this text and link: “This story was originally published by High Country News.”
Check the image requirements - Images that are clearly marked CC or from federal agencies are in the creative commons and are available for republishing. Outside of this, you can’t republish photographs or illustrations without written permission from High Country News and/or the photographer. Please reach out to syndication@hcn.org to request more information.
Don’t change anything significant - Articles must be republished in their entirety. Revisions for house style or references to time (“yesterday” to “today”) are allowed. If larger revisions are necessary, including significant trims or an editor’s note, contact us at syndication@hcn.org to get approval for the change ahead of republishing.
Share on social media - When sharing on social tag High Country News in your post and note the story is from @highcountrynews
Stay in touch - Let us know you republished the story. Send a link to syndication@hcn.org once you’ve republished the story and let us know how it’s resonating with your readers.
One Inuit family’s life, straddling national borders
by Brian Adams, High Country News November 5, 2018