"Hebron resettlement controversy" redirects here. For resettlement in Hebron, Palestine, see Hebron.
Hebron (Nunatsiavummiutitut: Kangerdluksoak,[1]Kangikluksoak[2] or Kangertluksoak[3])[4] was a Moravian mission and the northernmost settlement in Labrador. The traditional Nunatsiavummiutitut name for the area means "the Great Bay".[4] Founded in 1831, the mission disbanded in 1959. The Inuk Abraham Ulrikab and his family, exhibited in human zoos in Europe in 1880, were from Hebron.[5][6]
^Jarvis, Dale Gilbert. Exploring God's Acre: The Moravian Church Mission Graveyard at Hebron, Labrador. p. 93
^Carol Brice-Bennett, Dispossessed. The Eviction of Inuit from Hebron, Labrador. Montréal:Imaginaire | Nord, “Isberg” series, 2017. pp. 3, 13-15
^Loring, Stephen and Beatrix Arendt. 2009. « ... They Gave Hebron, the City of Refuge... (Joshua 21:13): an Archeological Reconnaissance at Hebron, Labrador ». p. 35