- Maniilaq
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Maniiḷaq (also spelled Maniilaq) is a figure of Inupiat legend and history. He is said to have lived in the 19th Century before European colonialists arrived in his area of Northwest Alaska. He lived as a hunter and a healer in Northwest Alaska . Various stories about him include that he heard voices predicting that white people would come to Alaska, that he had prophetic visions of boats that were propelled by fire or that flew in the air, and that he heard voices from a higher power whom he described with an Inupiat word meaning both "father" and "son." Some also say that Maniiḷaq rested every seventh day. Other prophecies attributed to Maniiḷaq include the prophecy that the village of Ambler, Alaska would one day become a large metropolis, and that a whale would swim up river and appear at Ambler. It is said that Maniiḷaq practiced traditional healing, and also that he resisted the dominant cultural order of shamanism. He is an important figure in Northwest Alaska Christian communities.
Maniiḷaq is also used as the symbol for a health services organization based in Kotzebue, which runs the Maniiḷaq Health Center and has clinics in 11 outlying arctic villages, including Ambler, Deering, Selawik, and Pt. Hope.
Citations
- Steven B Terry and Jill K. Anderson, Maniilaq: Prophet from the Edge of Nowhere
- Sarah V. Haile, Maniilaq: Eskimo Prophet
- LLT Productions VHS, Maniilaq—The Eskimo Prophet
- Maniiḷaq Association website, [1]
External links
History of Alaska Timeline - Prehistory
- Russian America (1733-1867)
- Department of Alaska (1867-1884)
- District of Alaska (1884-1912)
- Territory of Alaska (1912-1959)
- Recent history (1959-present)
Topics and events - Alaska boundary dispute
- Klondike Gold Rush
- Alaska Purchase
- 1925 serum run to Nome
- Aleutian Islands Campaign
- Alaska Statehood Act
- 1964 Alaska earthquake
- Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
- Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act
- Exxon Valdez oil spill
- History of Anchorage, Alaska
- History of Fairbanks, Alaska
- Other topics
Categories:- Pre-state history of Alaska
- Native American history
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