
So much for the land of the free, home of the brave. In
this country, if people don't like what you're doing, they can -- and often do -- simply outlaw it.
Since 1990, three well-known U.S. communities have attempted to pass laws impeding or prohibiting
the sale of furs. So far, they have not been successful. Many people view freedom of fashion as
freedom of expression, a First Amendment right. It seems we're not yet willing to go into our fellow
citizens' closets and tell them what to wear.
Or are we? Animal activists were successful nearly 30 years ago in making sure U.S. consumers would be branded criminals if they attempted to wear one kind of fur. Through one of the most emotional propaganda campaigns of the last century, activists lobbied for and successfully saw that a federal law was passed banning the import of this fur. One misleading image of this animal can evoke pangs of guilt among even the most staunch fur fans. And yet there is no rational reason for it. This fur is not endangered, has never been listed as threatened on endangered species treaties, and its populations are thriving at more than five million strong right here in North America. Due to the unopposed voice of the animal activist movement, it is a poster child for endangered species in the U.S., while Europeans and Canadians continue to enjoy this fur's beauty and practical qualities.
Those were sad years for Native North Americans, once known as Eskimos and now as Inuit. It seemed to them that the U.S. was not happy decimating its own Native American cultures; it was now turning its eye north of the border. Because as surely as if it had deliberately set out to do so, the anti-sealing campaign sent Inuit cultures into a downward spiral of suicide, depression, alcoholism and economic collapse. All in the name of protecting a sad-looking whitecoat baby seal that didn't even reflect the true nature of sealing.
By now, maybe you are outraged that anyone could even suggest that U.S. consumers should be able to buy seal products. If you're old enough, you're beginning to recall all those 1970s images of baby whitecoat harp seals, floundering helplessly on the ice while having their heads split open with clubs, sexbomb Brigitte Bardot cuddling animals protectively against a background of blood-splashed, blindingly white ice floes. A nightmare if anyone ever conjured one up on film.
So why were the anti-sealing campaigns so successful, if their claims were false? Because they went completely unchallenged. Slick, well-funded activist groups went after an easy target: Northern Inuit populations with little money, few communication skills and even less knowledge of what they were facing. They were blindsided. And the worldwide fur industry made a deliberate decision to sacrifice seal fur so that the rest of the trade wouldn't be tainted by its bad p.r. Better to cut off a limb than the entire patient become infected, was the rationale. Of course, animal activists have since come for the rest of the fur trade, not to mention the meat, dairy and biomedical research industries. It was a failed strategy that left Inuit sealers blowing in the Arctic wind. It's a subject furriers still don't want to talk about. Inuit, on the other hand, have gained a voice. With the entrance into the Canadian federation in 1999 of Nunavut, the new Inuit-majority territory in Northeastern Canada, they have begun to tell the world their story and what sealing means to them.
The Inuit of Nunavut feel theirs is the "other side" of the sealing debate, one that hasn't been told. They have survived for thousands of years in one of the world's harshest natural environments. Seals have provided both an excellent food source and a source of protective garments and footwear in an environment where store-bought meats and other products are prohibitively expensive to import over the ice. Even non-Inuits, who have depended on seal, know that sustainable use of the animal is crucial, and endangering it means endangering their own survival. The effects of anti-sealing measures on these people should have been foreseeable. With a lack of other natural resources, they lost a major source of income and, in many cases, have been reduced to dependence on welfare. Clinical depression, high suicide rates and increased levels of substance abuse have been among the side effects. Health problems associated with the consumption of nutrient-poor processed foods have also afflicted many communities.
"When the Marine Mammal Protection Act came into effect back in 1972," Tungilik continued, "I wondered why they never bothered to come to us so they could understand whom we were and what we were all about... Perhaps the animal rights activists, along the U.S. government, who meant well, did not realize that by creating the MMPA, they took away a freedom from the Inuit in Canada... Would the U.S. have been more sympathetic knowing that [our climate] can freeze you in just 30 seconds without the use of fur? We have been patient for 29 years and hopefully the law makers of America, a country known for freedom, will understand this and help to lift or review the U.S. MMPA, knowing they have robbed Canadian Inuit of a livelihood." In Greenland, a territory of Denmark, seal hunters face similar challenges. Perhaps because of their connection to Europe, however, the Great Greenland Fur House has seen prices and demand for their product rise significantly in recent years. The Alliance for America this year passed a resolution calling for the amendment of the U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act, but no U.S. politician has yet had the courage to propose such an amendment for fear of animal activist pressures. "This is an outrageous, arbitrary law," says Alan Herscovici, executive director of the Fur Council of Canada, who is recognized as one of the world's authorities on the anti-sealing movement. "No credible scientist claims seals are endangered. Seals can be worn in every other country except in the U.S., all because an influential political lobby has taken away the decision of U.S. consumers and scientists to determine if this product should be used. It's nothing short of a crime against the Inuit people."
According to annual studies by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Canada (DFOC), seal populations are prolific. The harp seal population is now estimated to be around 5.2 million, according to the DFOC's Atlantic Seal Hunt 2001 Management Plan. The DFOC sets limits on how many seal can be hunted each year. In 2000, it set a Total Allowable Catch of 275,000 harp seals, but only 91,602 (33 percent) were taken. The DFOC requires permits for seal hunters, except aboriginal and non-aboriginal coastal residents who live north of 53 degrees latitude. The Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada has maintained an active seal research program for many years, aimed at better understanding population fluctuations and the factors that influence them, as well as the role of seals in marine ecosystems. About $11 million has been invested in seal research since the early 1980s.
The situation is nothing short of baffling. As a U.S. citizen, I would be proud to wear seal fur. Seal hunting is an environmentally sound, scientifically studied endeavor, and seals are plentiful. The animals are killed humanely by people who were the original North American environmentalists. The entire animal is used, and the fur is often a byproduct of the primary source of food in the Arctic. It is illegal to take those precious, whitecoat baby seals. Other countries enjoy seal fashions, which are beautiful and practical, in the knowledge that they are helping Inuit populations build better lives for themselves. But in the U.S., I'm not allowed to make this decision. Animal activists took my decision away from me. Only when public opinion begins to turn in support of seal will any U.S. politician have the nerve to propose an amendment to the Marine Mammal Protection Act and give me back a choice I shouldn't have lost in the first place -- let alone ease the suffering of North American Inuits.
1. Great Greenland Fur House, Box 519, 3920 Qaqortoq, Greenland, www.great-greenland.gl |
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