Anna Kûitse Thastum (1942 – 13 July 2012) was a Greenlandic drum dancer. Born in Kulusuk, she lived variously in the United States and Denmark, before resettling there again. She was awarded a prize by the Greenlandic government in 2008 for her contributions to the culture of Greenland.

Anna Kûitse Thastum

Early life edit

Anna Kûitse Thastum was born in Kulusuk among 13 siblings in 1942.[1] She said her grandfather, named Kûitse, was a piniartorsuaq—great hunter—who killed several polar bears.[2] All of her siblings were drum dancers, as well as her parents;[3] the practice, used in ceremonies, had been banned by early Christian settlers in Greenland.[4] When her sisters had left their home, she took care of her father until 1966, when he died.[3]

After his death, she married an American and moved to the United States, and then returned in 1984.[3] She remarried the next year to a Dane, Arvid Thatsum,[5] and moved to Denmark, where she lived for four years, returning again to Kulusuk.[3] She met both of her husbands at DYE-4, an early-warning defense system put in place by the United States government at Kulusuk.[6]

Career edit

She began drum dancing again after her final return to Kulusuk.[3] After the completion of an airport in the town, she and her brother performed a drum dance for the audience.[3] She taught drum dancing to the children of her community, and nurtured the art practice.[3]

In 2008, Thastum was awarded with a cultural prize by the minister for culture, Tommy Marø [de].[3] The prize is for awarded annually for outstanding contributions to the culture of Greenland.[7] After being awarded the prize, she went on a tour in Italy and the United States, then taught drum dancing to children in Kulusuk and Tasiilaq.[8] She had asked for drum dancing to be considered a part of UNESCO's list of cultural heritage practices.[4] She was profiled in the 2010 film ECHOES, discussing her views on her life: there was "lots of sadness" but "I'm still alive".[9]

Later life and death edit

She died on 13 July 2012, following a long illness.[3]

References edit

Citations edit

Bibliography edit

  • Björnsson, Björn Jóhann (20 July 2008). "Hundrað mínútur í annan heim" [One hundred minutes to another world]. Morgunblaðið (in Icelandic). Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  • Buijs, Cunera (2010). "Related collections: Sharing East Greenlandic material culture and photographs". In van Broekhoven, Laura; Buijs, Cunera; Hovens, Pieter (eds.). Sharing knowledge and cultural heritage: First Nations of the Americas. Leiden: Sidestone Press. ISBN 9789088900662.
  • Elixhauser, Sophie (2019). "Inuit responses to Arctic militarization: Examples from East Greenland". In Kehrt, Christian; Torma, Franziska; Herzberg, Julia (eds.). Ice and snow in the cold war: Histories of extreme climatic environments. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 9781785339875.
  • Langhoff, Rune (13 July 2012). "Anna Kûitse Thastum er død" [Anna Kûitse Thastum is dead]. Sermitsiaq.AG (in Danish). Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  • Frank, Ivalo (2019). "Reconciling the past: Greenlandic documentary in the twenty-first century". In Kaganovsky, Lilya; MacKenzie, Scott; Stenport, Anna Westerstahl (eds.). Arctic cinemas and the documentary ethos. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253040305.
  • Maqé, Janus (18 November 2010). "Drømmer om at få trommedansen optaget ved Unesco" [Dreaming of having the drum dance recorded at Unesco]. KNR (in Danish). Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  • "Kulturpris" [Culture prize] (in Danish). Naalakkersuisut. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  • "Eqqaaniut" [Remembrance]. Kommuneqarfik Sermersooq (in Kalaallisut). July 2012. Archived from the original on 1 August 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2021.