She is the goddess of the hunt and is keeper of the animals well-being (Specifically land animals); She is also a healer. Her name means “She who is on high.” Within the Inuit culture Caribou is an important source of survival, and it is said that Pinga will prevent their travel to certain settlements if she is angered by their behaviors. Due to her skills at being a healer, many shamans channel her in their rituals in order to obtain her knowledge and abilities. These relationships are well known and helped her to be seen as the goddess of fertility. Specifically with conception and overseeing the birthing process.
Though Pinga is seen as a goddess of life, she is also a goddess of death. Her role in the Adlivun, the Inuit’s version of the underworld, is to gather the souls of humans who have passed and to transport them there. She watches and judges the humans behavior in life before they meet her. Therefore, many people also worship her for safe travels of their souls and the ones who have already passed into the afterlife. During the transit they are purified before moving into the realm of death, but she will only do this to the ones she deems to have earned passage.
https://www.girlmuseum.org/mythological-girls-pinga/
document1 (legacy-eutopia.com) - Encyclopedia of Spirits: The Ultimate Guide to the Magic of Fairies, Genies, Demons, Ghosts, Gods and Goddesses. By Judika Illes
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