April 4, 2003
An early Christmas present
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Childrens author
Michael Kusugak was in Iqaluit last week to work on a film rendition of his
book Baseball Bats for Christmas.
(PHOTO BY MIRIAM HILL)
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Childrens author
Michael Kusugak in Iqaluit to film Christmas special
A small group of children
sit rapt in the storytelling area of Iqaluits library. The sunlight beams
in through the windows onto the youngsters, some tucked in the arms or on the
laps of their parents. Others sit by themselves, elbows on knees, heads on hands,
listening to the grey-haired man in front of them.
Childrens author
Michael Kusugak knows how to hold a young persons attention. Kusugak is
in Iqaluit to shoot footage for a Christmas special based on one of his books,
but on this Saturday afternoon, his purpose is to simply tell stories.
He begins to read from
his book Baseball Bats For Christmas, then pauses.
"I dont like
to read from these books so well," he says with a smile.
Kusugak admits he much
prefers to tell stories off the cuff rather than read them from a book.
"I think its
so much better if you tell the story," he says in an interview later on.
"You know you can go home and read this, but its nice if you can
get somebody to tell it to you. You have to interact with the kids when you
tell a story."
He says the audience reacts
differently too. If hed just sat there and read from the book the whole
time, he says, they would just get bored.
"Traditionally [storytelling]
was a way for our elders to teach us morals by which to live. Its too
bad that its dying, Im trying to keep it alive," he says.
Kusugak, who grew up in
Repulse Bay and now lives in Rankin Inlet, has written half a dozen childrens
books, two of which have been developed into CD-ROMs.
He says some of the most
wonderful characters are found in Inuit storytelling, like Kiviq a character
whose exploits he entertained the children at the library with.
"When I was a little
boy the most famous person in the whole world was a man called Kiviq. Kiviq
was born a long, long time ago, so long ago that he was the very first person
on Earth," he says with wide eyes and hand gestures.
His tales, sometimes aided
visually by a piece of string used to create pictures of the characters, mesmerize
people from all latitudes.
"A lot of them are
traditional Inuit legends that I translate in English, but Inuktitut is such
a wonderful storytelling language. It makes stories really come to life,"
he says, explaining why he intermingles the two languages when he spins his
yarns.
Kusugaks popularity
can be seen not only in the numbers he brings out for readings across the country,
but also by the fact that Baseball Bats for Christmas will be seen on TV by
a national audience.
Kusugak has brought his
nine-year-old niece, Terrie Kusugak, to Iqaluit to play a role in the production.
"Were doing
the soundtrack, the narration, tomorrow, and on Monday were doing some
acting," he says. "Im going to be out with Terrie and then therell
be something that reminds me of these trees that arrived in Repulse Bay and
then the action will start."
But its Kusugaks
storytelling abilities alone that wowed the group at the library.
Lori Idlout brought three
children, aged 10, five and two to the library to listen to Kusugaks stories.
"Oh, they loved it,"
she says. "They were really interested in it. Just the way he told the
stories was great and the really old stories, he made them interesting and relevant
for them."
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