June 13, 2003
QIA rescues Inuit
studies program
Baffins beneficiary
organization gives $126,523 to Arctic College
JIM
BELL
Thanks to a donation from
the Qikiqtani Inuit Association, Nunavut students may enroll in Nunavut Arctic
Colleges Inuit studies program this year after all.
Thomasie Alivaktuk, the
president of QIA, gave Arctic College a $126,523 cheque last week, to be used
over the next two years to help pay for the colleges cash-strapped language
and culture program.
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
man with the big cheque: Thomasie Alivaktuk, the president of QIA, displays
a giant mock-up of the cheque his organization gave Arctic College last week.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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Its of great
value for Inuit, Alivaktuk said. We need more of our young students
to learn more of the language and culture.
Alivaktuk said QIA took
the money from a large surplus that it produced at the end of its last fiscal
year.
We were saving money
last year, and we were able to give it to the Arctic College, he said.
The colleges high-profile
Inuit studies program called the traditional knowledge and culture option
has offered courses on Inuit language, culture and history since 1996.
But staff were able to
do that only through an unusual two-for-the-price-of-one arrangement.
The two instructors who
taught the interpreter-translator program developed and taught the Inuit studies
program with no extra financial help, by using various creative methods to handle
the double workload.
But this year, when instructor
Alexina Kublu left the college to work as a full-time justice of the peace,
the two-for-one arrangement couldnt be made to work anymore. The college
needed more than the $290,000 previously budgeted for the program, especially
money to hire an extra instructor.
But the colleges
board of governors couldnt adjust the budget midway through the year.
The college was forced to declare that Inuit studies would be dropped for at
least one year, until college staff developed a new program funding formula
this fall.
That produced an outpouring
of concern from a long list of academics based in Canada, the U.S. and Europe.
Over the past seven years, the Inuit studies program has brought Inuit together
with non-Inuit researchers in a variety of projects.
Mac Clendenning, the president
of the college, received several letters from those and other supporters of
the program.
So he was understandably
grateful that QIAs contribution has allowed him to announce the college
will offer Inuit studies for the next two years.
I cant say
how pleased I am to be here this morning to receive this contribution for Nunavut
Arctic College, Clendenning said.
He said the college will
use the money to pay for an extra Inuit studies instructor over the next two
years.
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