April 18, 2003
The Tyme has come
Iqaluit spring festival
melds traditional and contemporary ways
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Solomon Awa skillfully
and quickly won last Friday’s igloo-building contest in one hour and 18 minutes.
(PHOTOS BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Nunatsiaq News
Times have changed since
Bryan Pearson began Iqaluit’s annual spring celebration in 1965.
The first Toonik Tyme had
an operating budget of $700. This year’s event was backed by $37,500 in public
money.
Though Pearson is happy
the tradition has survived, he is not particularly pleased with what he sees.
The longtime resident and former mayor said the event has become too long, too
commercial and too expensive for his liking.
Pearson remembers when
all the events were free, politicians and musicians came to town, and pies,
not cash payments, were handed out as prizes.
Mary Alikatuktuk won the tea and bannock competition.
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"We kept it as simple
and native as we could," he said.
But nearly 40 years after
Iqalungmiut named the first Honorary Toonik, the April event still draws the
community together, whether for big cash prizes or just a little tea and bannock.
For Crystal Jones, recreation
coordinator for the City of Iqaluit, Toonik Tyme 2003 was an exercise in creative
thinking.
A visible presence at most
of the 40 scheduled events, Jones relied on her eight-person Toonik Tyme committee,
her cell phone and 70 core volunteers, including inmates from the Baffin Correctional
Centre and the Youth Correctional Centre who helped set up events.
The organizing committee
tried to select events appropriate for people of all ages, both Inuit and Qallunaat.
"There’s such a wide variety of people in the community. We wanted to have
a little bit of everything for everyone," Jones said.
Whether to watch softball
on a frozen lake or worms slither down people’s throats, residents and visitors
alike turned out in droves to offer their support.
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Nicole Etitiq hurled
a bean bag during an afternoon of children’s games at Nakasuk school.
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"An event like Toonik
Tyme brings people together. We get to show off our different cultures in the
community. It’s a unique festival. It gets people out and involved and brings
out community spirit," Jones said.
Next year, Jones hopes
events are held in a consolidated area to avoid a common criticism this year
that venues were spread all over the city.
"Overall, attendance
was great at every event. I’ve heard the interest was waning in the past couple
of years but I think that interest has been rejuvenated," Jones said.
Tarus Adamie pitched for the Brown Sox.
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The three most popular
events — the Fear Factor challenge at the Royal Canadian Legion, the Giant Bingo
at the Nunatta campus residence and snowmobile races — drew packed crowds.
Fear Factor, based on the
popular TV series, was sold out. When the Legion was filled to capacity, people
were turned away at the door. As a result, many missed out on the chance to
watch the gross-out spectacle live.
But Jones said the organizing
committee is already planning a new location for next year’s worm fest — with
any luck, a venue that will permit children.
Under B for Bingo, about
350 ink-dabbing enthusiasts paid $100 for a crack at a $10,000 grand prize.
At press-time, organizers were still tabulating the amount of money raised.
Glenn Higgins, president
of the Iqaluit Minor Hockey Association, succeeded Mike Ferris as the Honourary
Toonik. But the Toonik Tyme beauty pageant was cancelled after two unrelated
deaths in the community.
On April 11, a 14-year-old
boy died after a being injured in a snowmobile accident. The following day,
a four-year-old girl was killed after she was struck by a sewer truck. Neither
incident was connected with Toonik Tyme activities.
About 250 people from Montreal
and Ottawa, as well as Nunavik, Igloolik, Grise Fiord and Pangnirtung, flew
to Iqaluit for the week, according to the Iqaluit Visitor’s Centre.
Johnny Oovaut, mayor of
Quaqtaq, was one of those visitors.
Oovaut came to support
his community’s hockey team but made time for music and snowmobile races.
"It was great. My
only complaint were the [hockey] referees," he said with a laugh.
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