July 11, 2003
Take the show on the
road
Nunavik ambassadors
bring the music and history of northern Quebec to northern Norway
ODILE
NELSON
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Putulik
and Grey give a taste of what the 4,000 expected audience members will see at
the festival. (PHOTO COURTESY OF JANE GEORGE)
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Nunavik throat singers
and Inuit culture will take the stage next week at one of Europe's premiere
indigenous arts festivals.
Maaki Putulik and Laina
Grey, cousins from Kangirsuk, will perform and lead a seminar on the traditional
Inuit style of singing at the Riddu Riddu Festival in Kafjord, Norway, June
16 to 20.
Putulik said she is thrilled
that she and her singing partner of two years will have the opportunity to participate
in such an ethnically diverse event.
"My understanding
is there are many other indigenous artists going to perform in Riddu Riddu.
I'm looking forward to meeting Sami people and exchanging knowledge and cultural
information. I'm looking forward to meeting new friends. The whole works,"
she said.
The Riddu Riddu Festival
began 12 years ago showcasing the culture of the Sami, the indigenous people
of northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia.
The Sami, like the Inuit,
lived in the Arctic for thousands of years before European whalers braved the
Northern climate. There are now about 100,000 Sami scattered across the North
and, again like the Inuit, they are constantly trying to preserve their culture
and identity.
However, Riddu Riddu has
evolved over the years into a celebration of indigenous cultures from across
the North. It now features both modern and traditional dance, music, theatre
and visual arts as well as a film festival and associated youth camp. Audience
members can also attend a variety of seminars and workshops that focus on indigenous
people.
This year's festival line-up
includes Greenlandic rockers Chilly Friday, Yat-Kha, a folk music group from
the Russian republic of Tuva, Mengo, a professional ethic dance group, and Urna,
a Mongolian vocalist.
It will also feature Ulla
Pirttijarvi, a Finnish yoik singer - a traditional style of Sami singing/chanting
that has been compared to throat singing.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Cousins
Maaki Putulik and Laina Grey will throatsing at Norway's Riddu Riddu arts festival
this month. (PHOTO COURTESY OF JANE GEORGE)
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But Nunavik will not only
showcase the talents of Putulik and Grey at the festival.
Jane George, the Kativik
Regional Government's communications director, will give a presentation on contemporary
Nunavik history and work as a staff member at the youth camp.
George said though she
considers her trip personal on one level, it is also professional. There are
many promotional aspects to the trip, she said, and the three women will each
be arriving with a suitcase full of materials on Nunavik to prove it.
George said she would spend
much of her time promoting Nunavik culture. She hopes to introduce participants
to such artists as Elisapie Isaac, the Salluit-raised filmmaker and singer-author,
and Angava, a Kuujjuaq-based heavy metal band, among others.
Such cultural exchanges,
she said, show the similarities of Northern indigenous cultures.
"The Sami live within
other nations in Scandinavia as do Inuit in Northern Quebec live in Quebec.
They don't have their own separate territory like Nunavut. And in terms of the
geography, it's extremely similar and the challenges that come up with that
- mineral development, natural resource development," George said.
"Apart from the cultural,
there's a lot to learn. There's a lot of economic development projects as well.
And the Sami can learn a lot from what others in other areas are doing as well."
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