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TRAGEDY OF PASSION.

AMIDST ARCTIC ICE. Lust and passion, hatred and revenge, cruelty and duty which leads unto death—-these are human attributes common alike to the diverse elements of a New York or a London, and to the barren wastes which fringe the Arctic's rim. It is to unravel such a tangled skein as this, with elemental passions playing out their tragedy on a stage whose area is the barren lands of the Canadian Arctic, and whose lighting is the brilliant glow of the midnight sun, or the emerald and sapphire fires of the aurora borealis, that Judge Lucien Dubue, of the Alberta Courts, has just loft civilisation, to hold court this summer, in the log outpost of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police at Herschel Island, in the depths of the grim Arctic itself.

Eight lives—a corporal of the Mounted Police, a white trader, four Eskimo men, one Eskimo women, and a four-year-old Eskimo girl—were lost in this grim play of lust and passion, enacted amid the “white silence" of the frozen north. All of them were sacrificed because of the passion of the white trader for the wife of a native Eskimo. The trader and the woman are dead, victims of their own 'earthly faults. The four Eskimo men and the one woman were killed as the tragedy,, developing its sequel of revenge and hatred, hastened toward its inevitable end. The-little child was strangled to death by members of its own tribe. The Mounted Police corporal died in the execution of his duty, which was to deliver to the police post at Herschel Island, one of the men wanted in connection with the murders. i

Full 2,000 miles north of the Ameri-can-Canadian boundary lies the white circle of the Canadian Arctic. Fifteen hundred miles of navigable rivers and inland seas lie between the Mounted Police post Herschel Island, and Edmonton, capital city of the TJrovince of territories.

The white trader, Otta Binder, took the Eskimo wife of one Ikialgaguina, to live with him. The latter's father, Ikpukuwak, and his cousin, Hannak, were anxious to get another wife to replace the one taken from Ikialgagnina by Binder. So they shot a fellow tribes-man, Anaigviak, seriously wounding him, and wanted Ilcialgagnina to tage Anaigviak's wife. Hannak returned to his tent, and Tatamagnana, partner of the wounded Anaigviak, took his rifle and shot Hannak dead. Pugnana, a cousin of Hannak, seeing Ikialgagnina run for his rifle, shot him dead. Ikpukuwak, father of Ikialgagnina, seeing his son dead, firpd several shots at Pugunana, without hitting him, whereupon Pugunana retaliated, killing Ikpukuwak, and also shooting Hannak's wife.

As the father, Lannak, and the mother, Hannah's wife, were now both dead, the people of the tribe not wishing to bo burdened with Okolitana, sought in vain for them. Then Corporal Doak heard of Pugnana, as living with another tribe of Eskimo, near to the Tree River police post. Before' he could reach the wanted man, however, Alikomiak, a relative of several of the slain men, aided by Tatamagnana, had revenged himself on Pugnana, and four- year-old daughter of the two, strangled her to death. Pugnana, Tatamagnana, • and the 1 wounded man, Anaigviak, disappeared, so the hunt turned from the dead and for a year the Mounted Police Pugnana to Alikomiak- and Tatamagnana, the latted of whom was arrested. Alikomiak, the latest entry into the circle of murderers, was later taken by Corporal Doak and placed in the Tree River post, pending weather suitable to undertake the 800-dog sledge trip along the rim of the Arctic to the Herschel Island post. By some means Alikomiak contrived to secure the corporal's rifle, and to the murder of Pugnana he added the death of Doak. Then, making his way to the dwelling of the white trader, Binder, Alikomiak wreaked his final revenge on the man who had been the cause of all this long trail of violence, bloodshed and murder.

and.after surmounting almost superhuman difficulties and dangers, delivered their man safely to Herschel Island.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19230921.2.17

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 21 September 1923, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
666

TRAGEDY OF PASSION. Shannon News, 21 September 1923, Page 4

TRAGEDY OF PASSION. Shannon News, 21 September 1923, Page 4

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