February 13, 2004
New wave of Arctic
documentaries hits TV
Stefansson study raises
new questions about renowned explorer
JANE
GEORGE
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
A
television documentary about Vilhjalmur Stefansson sheds new light on the Arctic
explorer's life. (FILE PHOTO)
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The Arctic adventures of
Vilhjalmur Stefansson, the Icelandic-Canadian explorer, climate change in the
Arctic, and the circumpolar peoples are the focus of a new generation of Arctic
documentaries and films, recently aired on national television networks.
But increased visibility
for films on the Arctic doesn't mean there's a huge, new wave of interest in
the Arctic - at least, that's the opinion of filmmaker, journalist and writer
Peter Raymont.
Raymont says he's been
fascinated for more than 30 years by Vilhjamur Stefansson, the subject of his
film, which recently aired on the History Channel.
One of the most famous
explorers of the early 20th century, Stefansson is best known for first meeting
the Copper Inuit, whom he called the "Blond Eskimos." Born in Iceland,
but raised in the United States, Stefansson was one of the first explorers to
adopt the Inuit lifestyle, living off the land.
In 1913 he set off on the
five-year Canadian Arctic Expedition to explore the Canadian northwest, which
is now part of Nunavut.
One of Stefansson's most
famous books about his years in the North is called "The Friendly Arctic."
The cover shows him dragging a seal across the ice.
Raymont had a copy of another
of Stefansson's books, "My life with the Eskimos," with him when he
went in 1972 to Cape Dorset to film a National Film Board documentary on the
West Baffin Co-op's animation studio.
"I've kept it ever
since. I've always wanted to make a film about him. And it's taken this long,"
said Raymont, who is the executive producer, producer and director of "Arctic
Dreamer: The Lonely Quest of Vilhjalmur Stefansson."
This film, awarded Best
Social Issues Documentary: Anthropology & Ethnology at the 2003 Columbus
International Film Festival, includes new information on Stefansson's six forgotten
Inuit grandchildren.
"In the process of
researching this film we discovered a lot about him that hadn't been revealed
before. It's well known in Inuvik that he had six grandchildren, but not well
known in the South," Raymont says.
Stefansson's Inuk wife,
Fannie Pannigabluk and his only son, Alex, whose stories are told in Raymont's
film, have usually been left out of histories and past films.
"It's also because
these biographers were rather lazy and didn't bother talking to Inuit people.
People who knew him in the South, they didn't bother going up north or finding
out what Inuit thought of the guy," Raymont says.
In addition to archival
material, Raymont's film includes interviews with three of Stefansson's six
grandchildren who live in Inuvik, Sach's Harbour and Holman.
"That is one of the
major contributions to the enormous amount of material on Stefansson that this
film offers - interviews and the Inuit perspective," Raymont says.
The film seamlessly weaves
interviews with Stefansson's descendants and experts such as the current president
of Iceland, along with footage and photos that Stefansson took himself when
he travelled to the Arctic in the early 1900s.
"He took photographs
and film of almost anything he did. He felt he needed to promote himself to
raise money for the next expedition," Raymont says.
Stefansson's dual character
is also explored in the film. His reputation suffered a blow when 11 members
of the scientific expedition team he was leading perished and three others later
died in a Survivor-like adventure on isolated Wrangell Island in the
Bering Sea.
Raymont says his own opinion
of the explorer wavered during the film's production.
"It changed almost
day to day, week to week and during the edit.... One has to admire someone who
ventures off across the ice. The Inuit didn't even want to go with him when
he set off looking for new islands.... They thought he was insane. He was with
sled dogs on open ice, drifting about. It was quite crazy. He was fortunate
not to have died," Raymont says.
"There's something
to admire in the man, his tenacity, his ability to raise funds for these extraordinary
expeditions, to sell himself. He must have been a very engaging speaker, a charming
man, yet on the other hand, he abandoned his wife and his only son and never
tried to contact his son even at the end of his life when it didn't matter anymore.
I find that rather sad and maybe one of the flaws to his personality."
Stefansson died in 1962.
Raymont produced a longer
version of his film for Icelandic television that includes footage from a trip
Stefansson made to Iceland in 1949 where he was treated as a conquering hero."
"People in Iceland
tended to forgive him," Raymont says.
The film will be aired
later this winter on APTN. The NFB is also distributing "Arctic Dreamer"
through its www.nfb.ca Web site and at Raymount's company at www.whitepinepictures.co.
On March 2 it will also
be shown in Hull at the Canadian Museum of Civilization. Governor-General Adrienne
Clarkson and the president of Iceland are to attend the public screening.
Last October, when Clarkson
was in Iceland, she gave the annual Stefansson lecture at the Stefansson Arctic
research institute in Akureyri.
"In 'The Friendly
Arctic,' the great explorer tells of how he was the first white man ever seen
by the Copper Eskimos of the western Arctic. As Stefansson made his way across
the ice and snow, he saw figures in the distance approaching him. Not wanting
to frighten them or invite hostility, Stefansson set down his rifle and his
pack on the ice and stretched his empty arms toward them. They responded by
putting down their staves and harpoons. And thus the two worlds met, with arms
open in peace, in respect, in a true willingness to embrace and learn about
the other," Clarkson said in her speech.
Climate change in the Arctic
is the subject of another series airing on CBC television's weekly program,
"The Nature of Things," on Wednesday and Sunday evenings.
To date, the five-part
"Arctic Mission" series has featured a documentary on the voyage undertaken
by the Sedna IV through the Northwest passage and a more interesting segment
on Arctic wildlife and the impact of global warming.
Part three, "People
of the Ice," which aired this week, looks at the social and cultural impact
of climate change on Inuit and features interviews with Iqaluit resident Meeka
Mike and her father.
Part four, "Washed
Away," shows communities affected by environmental change while Part Five,
"Climate on the Edge," looks at the scientific aspects of global warming.
APTN has also launched
its aboriginal documentary series, in Inuktitut, called "Voice of the Land,"
that airs on Saturdays at 2 p.m., 6 p.m. and 1:30 a.m.
Last week's documentary
showed Elisapie Isaac as host as she traveled to Salluit, Cape Dorset, the High
Arctic, Nome, Alaska, Anadyr, Chukotka, Kautokeino Norway and Greenland, visiting
locals and experiencing the social and cultural links and differences between
the circumpolar peoples.
Next week, "Unikatuuatit:
ajainaa!" ("almost"), produced by Isuma's Uqallanginiq elders
group, shows Igloolik elders discussing their views of contemporary and traditional
Inuit life.
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