Not so long ago the Eskimos had a thanksgiving rite for spirits who
helped them in hunting. When the exhausted hunters returned with their
prey, their women were waiting for them with scoops full of water.
A woman was supposed first to give a drink to a prey by wetting its
muzzle, and then give a scoop to a man. This rite was also performed
when hunters returned without any prey.
If by misfortune a hunter never returned, the scoop was not more used.
It was kept as a family relic, a remembrance of the days full of joys
and sorrows, connecting every wrinkle on the womans face with
her memories.