‘One with the Whale’ review: Climate change and animal activists threaten an Indigenous Alaskan community (2024)

In the remote Alaskan village of Gambell on St. Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea, students are allowed 10 excused absences a year for subsistence activities, primarily hunting. “If you don’t do subsistence activities, you die,” says the school principal in the documentary “One with the Whale,” airing this week on public television as part of Independent Lens.

Directed by Peter Chelkowski (whose credits include the NatGeo series “Life Below Zero: First Alaskans”) and environmental journalist Jim Wickens, the film is about many things at once: Climate change; poverty; parents worrying about their teenagers; trying to maintain traditions amid diminishing resources; and online bullying from activists when 16-year-old Chris Apassingok successfully hunts his first whale.

“One with the Whale” mainly follows the Apassingok family, but it also captures a broader context of life in Gambell, where the population is primarily Yup’ik Indigenous and numbers less than 700. Everything has to be flown in, which is expensive. When Mom goes shopping for groceries at the Gambell Native Store, she says they spend $300 to $500 a week on food. She holds up a box of Minute instant rice: $11.29. A six-pack of toilet paper is $13. Fresh produce is in short supply. As a result, more than 80% of their diet comes from subsistence hunting. A whale can feed the entire village for months.

Despite the prevalence of snow everywhere (there are no cars in sight, only four-wheelers and snowmobiles), out on the water Chris’s father is concerned about the lack of ice. “The walrus and the seal migrate with the ice. Without that ice, there’s no game and there’s no food.”

We learn that internet service came to Gambell fairly recently, but nearly everyone on camera has a smartphone. In 2017, Chris caught his first whale and the photos were shared on Facebook. Locally, he was celebrated as a provider. But hundreds of thousands of hateful messages and death threats came pouring in from people outside the community, primarily followers of Paul Watson, who is known for the reality series “Whale Wars.” A teacher at Chris’s school is aghast: “Telling a 16-year-old from rural Alaska — where the suicide rates are higher than any other part the country — to go kill himself is insane.” The experience has a visible effect on Chris, who is sweet and goofy but becomes withdrawn and morose. He doesn’t want to talk about it with the filmmakers or his mother, and it’s unclear if he felt he could talk about his feelings with anyone. This is a consistent outcome with online bullying, with the additional subtext that this close-knit community, new to the downsides of social media, is at a loss as well. (The filmmakers focus specifically on the people of Gambell and do not interview Watson.)

“Chris is just doing something his ancestors have done for thousands of years,” says the school principal. “It’s not like they’re going out and pulling hundreds of whales out of the ocean, not like Japan. They’re allowed two whales per year, according to the whaling commission, and this feeds the community.” Without that meat in the freezer, he adds, the village could die off.

It’s complicated. The Apassingoks are a loving family concerned about Chris’s wellbeing, while also dealing with universal problems around uncertainty and precarity. But the filmmakers leave certain details frustratingly vague. What is the texture and rhythm of daily life in Gambell? How do Chris’s parents earn money? What jobs are available on the island? Are hunters more guarded when sharing photos? How is Chris doing now, all these years later? What kind of mental health resources are available in a village this size?

‘One with the Whale’ review: Climate change and animal activists threaten an Indigenous Alaskan community (1)

In the film, oldest daughter Nalu is 18 and she’s itching to leave. “I’m not completely gay,” she says with a small giggle, “but I’m not really into guys either.” She’s still figuring it out — or how to talk about it, at least. Eventually she moves to Anchorage, where there are bowling alleys and Vietnamese restaurants and a girlfriend. Occasionally though, she’s homesick. “It’s amazing, not just that we survived for thousands of years, but that we thrived — at least until the white man came. Paul Watson’s attack on my brother is really nothing new. It started with the yankee whalers, who decimated our whale population and almost starved us to death. Then came the missionaries, with their crosses and boarding schools. ‘Kill the Indian, save the man,’ I think that was their motto. Now they brought us climate change. So Paul Watson and his followers are just the latest in a long line of (jerks).”

It’s worth noting the filmmakers do capture a successful whale hunt on camera, if that’s something you prefer not to see. Like any worthwhile documentary, “One With the Whale” is a window into the lives of others, and it’s handled with as much respect and sensitivity as you could expect from filmmakers outside the community.

“One With the Whale” — 3 stars (out of 4)

Where to watch: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday on WTTW World as part of Independent Lens. (It airs again at 12:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m. Thursday and 11 a.m. Saturday)

Nina Metz is a Tribune critic.

‘One with the Whale’ review: Climate change and animal activists threaten an Indigenous Alaskan community (2024)

FAQs

How does climate change affect whale migration? ›

The rapid warming of the planet is leading to a loss of habitat for whales and dolphins and greater competition for a diminishing amount of prey species. It is affecting the timing and ranges of their migration, their distribution and even their ability to reproduce.

How does whaling affect the environment? ›

Overhunting of whales has caused a change in deep-sea biodiversity and the potential ecological consequences are unknown. on poisoned or ill prey, this may cause death to the whales. Commercial whaling and human impact have caused the depletion of marine species, especially the top level in food web.

What do whales do for the environment? ›

Whales are at the top of the food chain and have an important role in the overall health of the marine environment. Whales play a significant role in capturing carbon from the atmosphere; each great whale sequesters an estimated 33 tons of CO2 on average, thus playing their part in the fight against climate change.

How do whales help cool the earth? ›

The iron-rich waste of great whales provides the ideal environment for the growth of phytoplankton. This means that the more whales there are, the better the ecosystem will be for the phytoplankton. This is important for climate change because phytoplankton also crucially sequester carbon dioxide in the deep oceans.

How do whales affect the global climate? ›

Whales accumulate carbon in their bodies during their long lives. When they die, they sink to the bottom of the ocean; each great whale sequesters 33 tons of CO2 on average, taking that carbon out of the atmosphere for centuries.

Is climate change a threat to whales? ›

Impact of climate change on whales | WWF. Warmer ocean temperatures and melting sea ice in the polar regions may jeopardise the ecology of the Arctic and Antarctic feeding grounds of many large whales. The bowhead, narwhal, and beluga, which live in Arctic waters year-round, are in particular danger.

Can we live without whales? ›

Without a population of whales, the krill on which they feed would multiply exponentially; in turn, krill will deplete the populations of phytoplankton and algae on which they feed, causing an imbalance in the marine ecosystem. Whales also play a role in carbon capture and help regulate the planet's climate.

Why did we stop killing whales? ›

By the late 1930s, more than 50,000 whales were killed annually. In 1982, the International Whaling Commission (IWC) decided that there should be a pause on commercial whaling on all whale species from 1986 onwards because of the extreme depletion of most of the whale stocks.

Why is killing whales bad? ›

The problem of whaling can be interpreted in many different ways, but the most typical objections of the anti-whaling community are that whales must not be caught because they are in danger of extinction; whales must not be killed because they are special (highly intelligent) animals; resumption of whaling would ...

How many whales are left? ›

Local surveys estimate 20000 (2015) whales in the central Atlantic25, less than 4000 (2015) in the northeast Atlantic40, and 10000 (2012) in the western north Pacific11.

How many blue whales are left? ›

Before whaling, there may have been as many as 250,000 blue whales, but today, it is one of the world's rarest species, with a population of just 10,000-25,000. Sadly, blue whales face a multitude of threats from human interference. However, it's not too late to change their fate.

Are whales still endangered? ›

Today, several whale species are listed as endangered due to shipping strikes (a collision between a boat and a marine animal), noise pollution, climate change, and many other factors. When a species is considered endangered, they fall into either the Critically Endangered, Endangered, or Vulnerable category.

What would happen if blue whales went extinct? ›

Worsening Climate Change

In the absence of whales, krill would likely eat much of the free-floating phytoplankton on the ocean's surface, resulting in a marked acceleration in climate change. Some whales actually feed on phytoplankton, however, so this relationship is not as clear as it might seem.

Do whales produce milk? ›

Many of the baleen whales (Suborder Mysticeti) have relatively brief lactations (5-7 months) during which they fast or eat relatively little. At mid-lactation they produce milks relatively low in water (40-53%), high in fat (30-50%), and moderately high in protein (9-15%) and ash (1.2-2.1%).

Do whales clean the air? ›

Whales can help mitigate climate change impacts by storing carbon in their bodies and transporting nutrients that benefit ocean food chains. The ocean captures about 31 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions, removing carbon from the atmosphere that would otherwise continue to trap heat and increase temperatures.

How does climate change affect marine animal migration? ›

Mobile species, such as fish, may respond to climate change by moving to more favorable regions, with populations shifting poleward or to deeper water, to find their preferred range of water temperatures or oxygen levels.

How is animal migration affected by climate change? ›

Climate change and extreme weather events are impacting animal migration patterns, with over half of all species on the move, researchers say. Many are heading north and to higher ground, but some are at risk because of the slower speeds at which they migrate.

What affects whale migration? ›

Weather patterns directly affect marine life. Seasonal temperature changes cause food sources to move into more pleasing waters, which is why you see whales and other migratory animals, including birds, move south during the winter and north during the summer months.

How does climate change affect whales and dolphins? ›

less available habitat for several cetacean species unable to move into colder waters; acidification of oceans as they absorb growing quantities of CO2; an increased susceptibility of cetaceans to diseases; reduced reproductive success, body condition and survival rates.

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