September 5, 2003
Never too old
Annual gathering gives
elders the chance to be young again
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Spectators came out
to watch games despite the rain Monday. Elders festivities lasted all week.
(PHOTOS BY PATRICIA D'SOUZA)
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The details are beginning
to fade along with the memories of many of the participants, but Lizzie Kelly
says the annual gathering between Nunavut and Nunavik elders began in 1997 in
Cape Dorset as a collaboration between a group of friends.
"Two couples thought
it would be nice if elders got together," says Kelly, Iqaluit's elders
co-ordinator.
"They invited some
Salluit people and they talked about old times and how they used to play games
when they were young."
The following year, the
event was held in Salluit and involved not just a few friends, but elders from
across the eastern Arctic, people related through history.
"Their ancestors were
related and their grandmothers would tell them that they used to know this person
and that person," Kelly says, explaining the success of the summer-time
gathering that each year unites a people divided by artificial political boundaries.
Taqulik
Kaitak of Nunavik steps
up to bat.
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Since then, the event has
continued to grow, and this year's festivities, held last week in Iqaluit, brought
more than 50 elders, some even travelling from outpost camps.
"Inuit traditionally
always got together," says Josephi Padlayat, one of the organizers of the
Salluit group. "Maybe not every year, but they would get together at one
place."
The annual elders gathering
is a continuation of that tradition. Surprisingly, however, it has persisted
without help from the formidable governing bodies in Nunavut and Nunavik.
"We have no meetings,"
Kelly says. "We have this gathering."
Instead, the event is pulled
together each year with the help of dedicated elders' representatives such as
Kelly and Padlayat. They help elders from their home community solicit funds
from hamlet councils and development corporations.
All the elders have to
do is come out to play.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Elijah
Mangitak of Cape Dorset pursues Katsuak Angutirgirk of Nunavik.
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An elders' soccer match
last Monday was a knock-down, drag-out fight to the end. A hula hoop demonstration
on Tuesday gave elders of all backgrounds the opportunity to shake their booties,
and chide each other like schoolchildren for their ineptness with the plastic
tube.
And on Thursday, a stylish
Celestine Erkidjuk of Iqaluit kept the square-dance going well into the night.
"It's been good to
see the people I used to know," says Kimmirut elder Eva Itulu in Inuktitut.
"Sometimes I feel like I go into another world when I see the people I've
known before."
Itulu was born in Salluit,
and moved to Cape Dorset with her family in 1943 when she was just a little
girl. In 1953, she and her husband travelled by dog team to Kimmirut and settled
there.
She says meeting her old
friends and relatives reminds her of her childhood - days spent fishing with
her family and catching fish as big as herself, when her parents were the only
leaders and there were no political issues to speak of.
"It doesn't make you
cry, it just makes you happy," she says.
Kudlu
Kadjulik and Charlie Miqqiajuk dutifully defend the Nunavik goal post during
Monday's soccer match.
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Itulu lifts up her pant
leg to show a deep scar running across her knee. She says despite the scars,
she still loves to dance.
But when she saw her relatives
at last, she says she felt weak.
"It's been so many
years since we've seen each other, we've even gotten old."
In an elaborate passing
of the bat ceremony, the same bat used during Monday's baseball game, the elders
selected Kangiqsujuaq as the site of the next gathering.
And while a year may be
a long time for an elder, in many ways, the annual gatherings keep them young.
With files from Itee Akavak.
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