There have been some indigenous cultures that genuinely practiced cannibalism such as the Wari’, but to imply it was commonplace is not only incorrect but also doing the work of (ironically cannibalistic) European colonizers.
thinking back to a shipwreck i read about where the survivors decided to take a longer route to safety bc they thought the closest inhabited island was filled with scary cannibals
cannibalism has factually been practiced by many groups, including some indigenous to the americas. limiting it to US-occupied peoples i can’t think of any examples, but that isn’t what the OP asserted.
they’re the most prominent example i was thinking of, but generally not included in what angloamericans call ‘native americans’ so i was tryin to be diplomatic with the terms
Generally yes? Most of the native/indigenous people I know only organize around/within the community theyre in, let alone another country(s). Most of the indigenous peoples i know though are from really small tribes though so Most anglos also dont even know what native tribes were once local in their area too
Isn’t cannibalism as a practice more a thing in Indonesia on the other side of the world? Like kuru is a thing and if you need a word for disease from eating people’s brains, then there’s probably a non-insignificant amount of eating people. Not like mayos don’t ever eat people though. Europeans would grind up mummies and drink a tincture of the dust as a miracle medicine, which is pretty weird and gross.
On top of everything else saying native Americans were cannibals is uniquely offensive.
The whole idea of wendigos is its what happens to you if you consume human flesh.
Entire villages committed mass suicide before winters if they didn’t have enough food so no one would have to resort to cannibalism.
There have been some indigenous cultures that genuinely practiced cannibalism such as the Wari’, but to imply it was commonplace is not only incorrect but also doing the work of (ironically cannibalistic) European colonizers.
thinking back to a shipwreck i read about where the survivors decided to take a longer route to safety bc they thought the closest inhabited island was filled with scary cannibals
you’ll never guess what happened next~
the whaleship essex
that’s the one! thanks for the name, i was drawing a serious blank
Papists do weekly ritual cannibalism according to their own doctrine
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cannibalism has factually been practiced by many groups, including some indigenous to the americas. limiting it to US-occupied peoples i can’t think of any examples, but that isn’t what the OP asserted.
The Aztecs practiced Cannibalism
they’re the most prominent example i was thinking of, but generally not included in what angloamericans call ‘native americans’ so i was tryin to be diplomatic with the terms
Do angloamericans only include people that used to live within the borders of the US and Canada or something?
Generally yes? Most of the native/indigenous people I know only organize around/within the community theyre in, let alone another country(s). Most of the indigenous peoples i know though are from really small tribes though so Most anglos also dont even know what native tribes were once local in their area too
Isn’t cannibalism as a practice more a thing in Indonesia on the other side of the world? Like kuru is a thing and if you need a word for disease from eating people’s brains, then there’s probably a non-insignificant amount of eating people. Not like mayos don’t ever eat people though. Europeans would grind up mummies and drink a tincture of the dust as a miracle medicine, which is pretty weird and gross.
Because all Native Americans are Algonquian?
Yup that’s exactly what I said thank you for highlighting that.
I mostly thought they’re just Indigenous people talking about white people: