Liam,
I am sorry but I think you should have said a 'different' viewpoint. The restaurant 
was filmed and there was
cheering with one man saying how proud he was while the whale was suffering.

Trudy

Liam wrote:

> for the sake of an unbiased viewpoint...
>
> >Using the words of a Makah Elder:  This morning, a whale presented
> >itself to the Makah people and offered itself to the whalers and was
> >taken.
> >
> >It was my priviledge to be able to the watch the entire hunt this
> >morning on TV.  At least two stations carried it, so now I report what I
> >was with my own eyes.  On Saturday, the Makah went to hunt and
> >protestors buzzed the canoe and the canoe so badly at one, for certain,
> >and possibly two whales were injured by the protestors alumunium boat.
> >The protestor boats went right over the back of the whale in an effort
> >to "protect" the whale.  Blood was clearly visible on one whale where
> >the engines and boat bottom had cut it.  As a result, the Coast Guard
> >confiscated 3 boats and a jet ski.
> >
> >This morning at 4:30 am, the whalers took to the sea.  There were no
> >protest boats out (Coast Guard had all the small ones locked up).
> >Although I had been taught how a relation offers itself to the people, I
> >have never before witnessed it.  It was a magic moment.  There were four
> >whales in the sea.  The first the Makah approached, turned itself alway
> >from them and they left it.  The whalers approached the second.  It
> >waited for them and when the canoe was close and the harpooner stood,
> >the whale raised its head out of the water right next to the canoe.
> >There was a moment when you could almost hear the whale and harpooner
> >speak to each other.  The harpoon was thrown and stuck.  The whale began
> >to move out.  A second harpoon was thrown, and then the whalers got a
> >wild ride.  When the first harpoon struck, the whale thrashed some and
> >the canoe was right above it.  There was fear the canoe would overturn,
> >but the whale was careful and never raised its tail or tried to harm the
> >whalers.  In just a few moments, the support boat pulled alongside the
> >whale and a third harpoon with a heavier line was thrown and struck.
> >The whalers on the support boat shot at the whale three times, missing
> >on the first two.  The whale again raised its head high and the third
> >shot killed it instantly.  The entire hunt lasted just 10 minutes.
> >
> >The Makah are now towing the whale to a beach where the people are
> >waiting to do ceremony.  Media will not be allowed at the ceremony.
> >After the ceremony, the whale will be rendered by the Makah and
> >distributed to the people.
> >
> >Puyallups, Nisquallys, Tulups (and I'm sure others) peoples are on the
> >rez today to support the Makah, particularly after what happened
> >Saturday which was so incredibly dangerous and explosive.    A reporter
> >this morning spoke with people at a restaurant on the rez (the only
> >restaurant BTW).  She said that as they watched the hunt, the mood was
> >quiet and somber and when the whale was taken, a prayer attitude
> >prevailed.  There was no whooping and hollaring, just a quiet respectful
> >moment and lots of tears of gratitude.  The whalers, themselves, were
> >hugging each other and raising their paddles in the air.
> >
> >After the whale was taken, the large Sea Shephard boat raced toward the
> >canoe at a really high rate of speed and broke the 500 feet boundary.  I
> >applaud the Coast Guard and the men who protected the whalers.  A small
> >rubber dingy with 3 Coast Guard personnel put itself between the large
> >ship and the canoe and the ship turned away before hitting the dingy.
> >
> >Please hold the Makah and the whale in your prayers this day.  Now also,
> >the hunt has revived racism against Native peoples in this area to a new
> >high.   Northwest Cable News tooks calls this morning and one man ranted
> >and raved about how the US Government protected the Makah and tax
> >dollars were spent by having the Coast Guard out there in order to
> >support this tradition.  He asked if the government would now support
> >and protect white hunters who wanted to revive their old
> >tradition...hunting Indians.  Unfortunately, that is now a common
> >sentiment.
> >
> >I am in awe of what I saw this morning.
> >
> >Storm
> >
>
> Han kolas,
>         I sat watching the news tonight here in Washington.  I watched the
> whale being brought to shore, saw and felt the pride of the Makah Nation,
> saw the excitement of the children in the water It warmed my heart beyond
> words.
>          Then I got an email accidentally...hmmmme....sent to me about how
> sad this person was that this whale person was killed.  She felt as though a
> relative was killed, and it is so, as we are all related, but I wrote her
> and spoke to her of the difference between cultural traditional and
> environmentalism, and how sad it was to me that such very loud voices cry
> out for this one whale when over 90 of my buffalo relatives have been
> murdered this year out of Yellowstone. I spoke to her of the difference
> between this whale warrior dying a good death, and all these buffalo
> relatives of mine who are slaughtered/murdered....like Wounded Knee all over
> again.  That the buffalo people did not have the benefit of ceremony, the
> benefit of honor, respect, dignity, of being a warrior.....no, they were and
> continue to be slaughtered/murdered.  Will this woman get it?  I truly doubt
> it.  Would that such a loud voice as I see and hear on the tv in protest of
> this whale's good death be shouted just as loudly over our relatives the
> buffalo.....sigh......but alas....no Sea Shepherd boats seem to be able to
> float out on the land of Yellowstone and beyond.
>                                               Mitakuye Oyasin
>                                         Sometimes I am by myself
>                                            but I am never alone!
>                                            Alexis Wiyaka Cikala
>
> Liam, thanks for the link.  I just emailed this seashepherd orgainzation.
> Apparently they want the Federal government to "amend" the Makah treaty.
> But
> don't they mean break the treaty?
> Anyway I wrote to them and told them that if they want to break any
> treaties,
> then we will just take our land back.
> Warren Peltier
> Porcupine Clan (Ouch!!!)
>
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