Iceland review - 2002, Side 46

Iceland review - 2002, Side 46
44 ICELAND REVIEW employees. The Post is the design and production house for Greenland’s famous stamps, using local and international artists to grace the collectible postage that the Danes have been cranking out for years. In your wanderings, you’ll find a kind of openness here that comes as a bit of a surprise when you’re sticking out like a sore thumb. Local residents feel theirs is the friendlier part of the coun- try. “I was the child of every adult growing up here,” says Rie Jurgensen, a Danish native of Tasiilaq who returns every summer from her studies in Denmark. When she moved to western Greenland to go to high school, Rie says that she would “say ‘hi’ and people would just look at me”. The Red House The Red House is one of Tasiilaq’s central operations. It’s located at the top of town in a hunter’s neighbourhood, where kids, dogs and deserted houses share a steep network of dirt roads. One house in the neighbourhood is now deserted due to ill-intentioned demons that overran it several years ago. Though Greenland officially prac- tices Christianity, Inuits’ beliefs still have roots in animism. When a crew of kommuna (public government) employees were sent to clean it out, they used gloves and poles to drag clothes and furni- ture out of its tainted innards. Demonised or no, most of the hous- es up here are hanging on by less of a thread than in other parts of town; The Red House sticks out both in its size and its fresh coat of – you guessed it – red paint. Guests in these nine rooms are served fin whale and seal ribs in a dining room where a polar bear skin hangs stretched in a wood- en frame, a bullet hole in the breast of the fur. During high tourist season, The Red House both hosts private individuals and services private tour organisations with food or a night’s stay. If you hang around long enough, as many of the guests seem to, the cellphone of Robert Peroni, aforementioned Italian ex-pat who has made Tasiilaq his home, is constantly ringing in a fit of tourist co-ordina- tion. One returning guest puts it this way: “When I met Robert seven years ago, his hair was not grey.” A girl in Tiniteqilaaq carries a load of dried fish. Virtually every house- hold in town makes a living from hunting. 40 IR302 - Grænland bs-rm 3.9.2002 12:14 Page 44

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