Aua (angakkuq)
Aua (also transcribed Awa and Ava) (circa 1870, Igloolik area - after 1922[1]) was an Inuk angakkuq (medicine man) known for his anthropological input to Greenland anthropologist Knud Rasmussen. As a spiritual healer practicing into the 1920s, Aua provided perspective on Inuit mythology at a time when it was being subsumed by the introduction of Christianity. Aua told the story of his cousin's mother Uvavnuk, whose song "The Great Earth" is still popular.
![](../I/1907_coat_of_shaman_Ava_-_front.png.webp)
Front side of Aua's famous shamanistic coat
Aua was married to Orulo and they had four children.[2][3]
His encounters with the Danish explorer were fictionalised in the 2006 film The Journals of Knud Rasmussen, by the Inuit team who had produced Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner.
Sources
- Penny Petrone. Northern Voices: Inuit Writing in English. University of Toronto Press, 1992. ISBN 9780802077172. Pg 21.
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