The Grind

The Grind

2015, Environment  -   37 Comments
8.92
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Ratings: 8.92/10 from 131 users.

"We have an outdoor slaughterhouse," a voice informs us in the opening moments of the new documentary The Grind. In the Faroe Islands, which lie in the North Atlantic between Iceland and Norway, the majestic blue oceans often turn crimson with tides of blood. With little agriculture and wildlife at their disposal, the Faroe Islands have long looked to the sea for their main source of nourishment and commerce. This results in the widespread slaughter of whales and other sea life in a practice known as "the grind." While the grind has been a tradition on the islands for nearly a thousand years, it has recently spurred the ire of animal rights activists all over the world, who look upon the murder of these beautiful creatures with great disdain and protest.

One such activist is Lamya Essemlali, who serves as president of Sea Shepherd France, an organization that patrols the waters in the region in an effort to protect whales from such abuses. Joined by hundreds of additional volunteers from all over the world, they formed a campaign called Operation Grind Stop. "What's happening here is something that's easy to stop if we have the will," Lamya says. But rallying that willpower among the locals proves to be a great challenge. Most are vehemently opposed to what they view as the group's unwelcomed incursion upon their way of life and means of survival. "You are not activists, you are terrorists!" cries one protester during a town hall meeting.

While The Grind makes the brutality of whaling jarringly clear from reels of footage dating back many decades, the film also offers the opposing point of view from the Faroese people themselves. "Grind is a part of a much bigger picture," says Kjartan Hoydal, a marine ecologist and native islander. "We only have the sea to depend on and we can't accept that the world goes in a direction that we can't use those resources."

The Grind is a thoughtfully assembled examination of the battle between what some view as a necessary way of life, and the pursuit by others to promote ecological and humane responsibilities.

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Pie
Pie
2 years ago

I wouldn't mind if it was just fish, but these creatures are sentient beings with high intelligence. your cultur and way of life is wrong. stop be conservative about your bad culture and adapt please. We made our black pete's non-black too (so now all the kids recognize its their dad so it not work at all but hey) if we can do it you can do it too!

Jabba LeChat
Jabba LeChat
4 years ago

It's food...

Matthew Adams
Matthew Adams
4 years ago

Beautiful film about community coming together for the common goal of providing for each other. Amazing!

Max
Max
5 years ago

Made me wanna harpoon vegans

Bob
Bob
6 years ago

It's no wonder our culture(s) are so barbaric. Stop slaughtering animals, from the sea or the land. Until we live with the animal world and stop exploiting it, we are on a path to complete destruction of all nature, including ourselves.

Christine Holman
Christine Holman
7 years ago

I like this documentary. And although, I think the point was to get you to think the grind should be stopped, I think that the life these people live is far more sustainable then the life of the majority of the world. They are a community, they get what they need from the land, they look out for everyone in their community. Honestly, I think we need to be more concerned with people who don't have food or with the mass industry of slaughter-houses that are polluting the land and water around the world. To live, something must die. It is apart of the life cycle, and the natural food web. The people of this island, I think this could be of less concern and are fine.

Erez
Erez
7 years ago

Funny how no one mentioned the mega ships that kill the ocean every day. That the real problem is the mass slaughter of the world's oceans by the other mass consumers. Countries like China, Japan kill more fish in one day that this entire island for the entire year. Japan is busy overfishing now and cryo freezing the harvest to have for later since they know global shortages are less than 50 yrs away. Take care of the bigger problems, real problems that will produce real solutions. The oceans are full of drift nets that kill more fish each day again than this entire island. Commercial fishing is a barbaric unbias killing machine with over two-thirds of all fish killed in trawlers are not even eaten and just thrown overboard. These guys eat everything and let nothing to waste. The Sheppard should find a real battle to fight. This documentary was a joke. The people of the island are already advice not to eat as much whale meat for health reasons by their doctors.

Me
Me
8 years ago

So these French go to another country to tell them how to live? They do not kill just to kill. They dont kill them to profit to point that they make the whales die out. They say themselves that the Grind is a very small portion of slaughter of the whales. Since they cannot fight BIG FOOD suppliers, lets just come over here and bug the few who arent really hurting anyone. Even with the amount of whales they kill, I bet that whole region's carbon foot print is substantially smaller than the protesters. Leave them be. They are not primitive or horrible. Theyre slaughtering whales! OH NO! Um, billions of animals are slaughtered and mutated to feed us. Who is wrong?

Rahul
Rahul
8 years ago

people who support this killing has just one reason to justify it.. TASTE.. animals are not the only food resource.. watch Earthlings documentary and peter singer videos before deciding about food resource..

Veljko
Veljko
8 years ago

Hi, guys. Here's a word form future enviromental and GIS analysist - In the past humans didn'e eat meat so frequently because it was a bit hard to catch your prey in that period, so meat was considered a special meal for special occasions. Nowdays, you can get meat on every step (?!). When i heard the population of Faroe Islands is 15000 and that they killed 1300 whales (whos population is about 800000) for FOOD in 2014., i thought it was fair. It's hard to live on an island where you can't grow anything and only thing you do is herding sheep. There's no doubt that Sea Shepard meant only good, but it's BIG Trawler ships they should be after, not few countrymen which are trying to survive another year. And, for the end, do you vegans and vegeterians think that lion should not kill and eat zebra or that wolf should not kill and eat deer? Is there a need for prohibition laws for all carnivores in the world so the nonecarnivore beings may enjoy their life? I think meat should be eaten only on special occasions or once-twice a week, if you have various choices of food... if not, you're not going to starve, that's for sure. Cheers!

Steve
Steve
8 years ago

The islanders should just eat the sea shepherds, problem solved....

jiggajigga
jiggajigga
8 years ago

what kind of uppity fools would go to someone else's country and try and interfere with their cultural traditions? ignorant french fool of a woman, she should stay in france and protest all the barbaric things the french do to animals, for example force feeding birds fat in tubes down their throats until their livers explode, and then eating them. stupid hypocrites. these people are killing whales for food, they don't torture them, unlike the birds used in foie gras.

Lisa
Lisa
8 years ago

April-
This documentary is about the Faroe Island Grind, located north of the UK, near the Arctic Circle. The Falkland Islands are off of the East Coast of South America, literally across the world. Sorry to nit-pik but it's sort of a big deal.

As far as the Grind is concerned, what I saw didn't appear at all "barbaric." They caught and killed 33 Whales in a very civilized fashion. They cleaned, cut, and split the meat for food. Nothing went to waste and detailed records are kept. Do I think that killing thousands of whales is unnecessary? Yes. But there is no reason that a the people of the Faroe shouldn't be granted the right to continue their tradition. A reasonable compromise would be to put a cap on the number of whales they are allowed to fish and a limited time frame in which to do it.

Merino
Merino
8 years ago

Just last week they were 900 Pilot Whales killed in a grind, Those who commit these killings and the one's who support such act's are in my eyes Total M*ron's.
I don't care if it's part of there culture there is no way in hell to justify this.
Long Live Sea Shepherd !

FollowTheFacts
FollowTheFacts
8 years ago

...amazingly well done documentary...I gave it nine...short and intense and hard to watch...Gave a good glimpse, also, of what is probably the most "tribal" form of living, "nordic style" in existence, so, very interesting for me as a scandinavian from that perspective as well...not a place I would want to live...Färöarna...
The fact that something has been done for "hundreds of years" is not an argument that impresses me, but I have seen how animals are treated "on land" in scandinavia as well, so it's a difficult topic to try to sort out...
In california, where I live, things are certainly not better, but in most respects worse from what I have witnessed...
A fine documentary this is....

TomazZzz
TomazZzz
8 years ago

So I understand that it is important to protect whales... but this is this peoples way of life, its their food.. Why don't this whale shepurths go to japan where they kill that much of whales per day?? just for the fat? the rest they toss over the board.. why?
Because its much more easy to screw around with few thousand then few millions, thats why.

Native
Native
8 years ago

Unfortunately, what I see in the comments is mostly ignorance of history, sustainable lifestyles, indigenous native life. Because the educational systems in some parts of the world is so lacking when it comes to other cultures around the world, most people know nothing of what it means to the future of this planet to have knowledge of indigenous living. Many catastrophes have happened throughout the history of this planet and scientists believe we are overdue for another and since they are cyclical in nature for the most part, it is not a question of if but when. If that happens, where will you be with your technology, your supermarkets? Not as well off as the ones who live close to the earth and sea I would venture to guess.

edgedweller
edgedweller
8 years ago

would make sense to move somewhere sustainable, what are they doing living in the middle of nowhere living a life of a common 7th century barbarian? whats the hope on their children? to be little barbarians until they grow up and learn to slaughter animals? bravo...ultimately this is what will hold humanity off from progressing on to our next evolutionary process - we're not even remotely close to activating 'junk' dna, our referal to the unknown as 'junk' says it all really...odds on we'll destroy the world before we do.

dewflirt
dewflirt
8 years ago

Their recommended intake is so small that I wonder why they bother eating it at all, must have huge freezers to store the leftovers. Its all a bit blood thirsty for my liking but then, is there a friendly way to drag a passing whale from its element and chop its head off? I wonder if there is chat amongst the whale communities about mysterious pod disappearances, do they pass the Faeroes heart in mouth watching for a danger they don't recognise even as it bops them on the head.

June Ribaldi
June Ribaldi
8 years ago

very diffcult to watch I am a Ocean girl I AM IN THE WATER DAILY NO i DO NOT EAT FISH OR ANYTHING THAT HAS A BEATING HEART I SUGGEST THOSE who EAT ANIMALS WATCH COWSPIERCY ----- THEY WILL CERTANILY NEVER LOOK AT THEIR STEAKS AN HAMBURGERS AGAIN Thank you all here for posting The Grind Wish some day Cowspieu my messengerrcy is here for te masses to see I have shared it thr and people are thanking me fr sharing

Native
Native
8 years ago

Where do people think their meat at the supermarket comes from? Do they think it magically appears from some unknown source, that there are not factory farms that keep animals in tortuous conditions, that the beef they eat comes from animals that live in heavenly conditions? Wake up! These people use bounty from the sea as their food source just as the northwest Natives of Alaska do, just as the Natives of Alaska have a yearly whale and seal and caribou hunts not to mention the subsistence fishing. Is not all that a bloody mess, too? Does an animal have to be less than a whale in order to be considered an acceptable food source to the natives of the countries where whale is a food source? If people want to do something about keeping whale populations in higher, healthy numbers then regulate the industries in all whaling countries not the subsistence whale hunts and make sure that as much as the whale as possible is used so that waste is at a minimum in those countries that have industrialized whaling.

alvin v
alvin v
8 years ago

plain and simple --food-- gotta eat--don't like it --don't eat it

Richard Neva
Richard Neva
8 years ago

This film is too disgusting to watch! Those poor creatures and so human like to me I cannot take it. What a shame that those people do that!

AprilOneal
AprilOneal
8 years ago

This is the best kind of doc... they show both sides and leave me to decide what my take is. I get the feeling the people of the Falklands are closer to, and more a part of nature than western culture, and either they aren't understood, or they are slowly being willfully forced to westernize. If only tribes like these had foreknowledge of their future suppression, and done something to stop the pollution of their beautiful way of life.

Nickolas
Nickolas
8 years ago

hmm interesting they have to do it because there is nothing else to eat while drinking a BEER! What a liar! Something tells me that beer was not made from wild plants on the bay. Also whales are not organic, they contain 10,000 plus industrial chemicals. I hope these people die off soon, sadly the whales will die off first.