https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/theyre-not-human-how-19th-century-inuit-coped-with-a-real-life-invasion-of-the-walking-dead
Indigenous groups across the Americas had all encountered Europeans differently. But where other coastal groups such as the Haida or the Miβkmaq had met white men who were well-fed and well-dressed, the Inuit frequently encountered their future colonizers as small parties on the edge of death.
βIβm sure it terrified people,β said Eber, 91, speaking to the National Post by phone from her Toronto home.
And itβs why, as many as six generations after the events of the Franklin Expedition, Eber was meeting Inuit still raised on stories of the two giant ships that came to the Arctic and discharged columns of death onto the ice.
Inuit nomads had come across streams of men that βdidnβt seem to be right.β Maddened by scurvy, botulism or desperation, they were raving in a language the Inuit couldnβt understand. In one case, hunters came across two Franklin Expedition survivors who had been sleeping for days in the hollowed-out corpses of seals.
βThey were unrecognizable they were so dirty,β Lena Kingmiatook, a resident of Taloyoak, told Eber.
Mark Tootiak, a stepson of Nicholas Qayutinuaq, related a story to Eber of a group of Inuit who had an early encounter with a small and βhairyβ group of Franklin Expedition men evacuating south.
βLater β¦ these Inuit heard that people had seen more white people, a lot more white people, dying,β he said. βThey were seen carrying human meat.β
Even Eberβs translator, the late Tommy Anguttitauruq, recounted a goose hunting trip in which he had stumbled upon a Franklin Expedition skeleton still carrying a clay pipe.
By 1850, coves and beaches around King William Island were littered with the disturbing remnants of their advance: Scraps of clothing and camps still littered with their dead occupants. Decades later, researchers would confirm the Inuit accounts of cannibalism when they found bleached human bones with their flesh hacked clean.
βIβve never in all my life seen any kind of spirit β Iβve heard the sounds they make, but Iβve never seen them with my own eyes,β said the old man who had gone out to investigate the Franklin survivors who had straggled into his camp that day on King William Island.
The figuresβ skin was cold but it was not βcold as a fish,β concluded the man. Therefore, he reasoned, they were probably alive.
βThey were beings but not Inuit,β he said, according to the account by shaman Nicholas Qayutinuaq.
The figures were too weak to be dangerous, so Inuit women tried to comfort the strangers by inviting them into their igloo.
But close contact only increased their alienness: The men were timid, untalkative and β despite their obvious starvation β they refused to eat.
The men spit out pieces of cooked seal offered to them. They rejected offers of soup. They grabbed jealous hold of their belongings when the Inuit offered to trade.
When the Inuit men returned to the camp from their hunt, they constructed an igloo for the strangers, built them a fire and even outfitted the shelter with three whole seals.
Then, after the white men had gone to sleep, the Inuit quickly packed up their belongings and fled by moonlight.
Whether the pale-skinned visitors were qallunaat or βIndiansβ β the group determined that staying too long around these βstrange peopleβ with iron knives could get them all killed.
βThat night they got all their belongings together and took off towards the southwest,β Qayutinuaq told Dorothy Eber.
But the true horror of the encounter wouldnβt be revealed until several months later.
The Inuit had left in such a hurry that they had abandoned several belongings. When a small party went back to the camp to retrieve them, they found an igloo filled with corpses.
The seals were untouched. Instead, the men had eaten each other.