April 30, 2004
Actor headlines at suicide conference
“I need to know
you are safe,” Tom Jackson tells delegates
SARA MINOGUE
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Randy Shamee, Kukik
Baker, Odie Tagalik and Adrienne Pameolik, all members of the Arviat Youth Piliriqatiqiit,
traveled from Arviat to attend the two-day conference. (PHOTO BY SARA MINOGUE)
|
Caregivers, counsellors and volunteers from across Nunavut met in Iqaluit last
weekend to talk about their role in suicide prevention.
“Let’s face it, there are not a lot of people lining up to work
in suicide,” Dave Masecar, president of the Canadian Association for Suicide
Prevention, said during his keynote address.
“Our occupation can be isolating and lonely. There may not be a lot of
the people we need support from in the community, but there are lots across
Nunavut.”
The Dreamcatcher North of 60 Conference for Caregivers was designed to bring
those people together to attend workshops, meet, and share stories.
Dreamcatcher North of 60 is part of Tom Jackson’s suicide prevention
work. The actor and singer is known for his role as Chief Peter Kenidi on CBC’s
North of 60. He developed the Dreamcatcher North of 60 tour after fellow North
of 60 actor, 19-year-old Mervin Good Eagle, committed suicide in 1996.
In the past seven years, the tour has visited schools and community centres
across the country, hosting workshops to send positive messages about stress,
mental health, suicide prevention and coping.
The tour made its first stop in Iqaluit in 2002, when Jackson joined singer
Susan Aglukark to speak to 400 youth at Inuksuk High School. The pair later
played a concert together. This year, for the first time, the tour will visit
19 smaller communities across Nunavut, from Resolute Bay to Sanikiluaq.
But first, elders, youth, professional and volunteer caregivers from communities
across the province came together to attend two days of workshops in Iqaluit.
“I’m a fly-in and fly-out guy,” Jackson said during his opening
address on Friday night. “People come to see me because I’m a celebrity.
You are the people that do the work, and I need to know you are safe.”
Sheila Levy, president of the Nunavut Kamatsiaqtut Baffin Help Line, past president
of CASP, and a teacher at Inuksuk High School, was the principal organizer of
the conference.
“Working in this area takes a lot out of you and it’s really important
to be able to get together, talk about some of the issues that are occurring,
and then be able to feel that there are other people doing your work and you
can network with them and get some new ideas and new skills,” Levy said.
“Then they can go back to their communities feeling rejuvenated and inspired
and having some new skills that they can try out and also having new networking
connections.”
Kukik Baker was one of four youth to travel from Arviat for the conference.
As president of the Arviat Youth Piliriqatiqiit, Baker is actively involved
in youth issues.
The 35-member organization is fundraising for a new drop-in centre where youth
can play games, watch movies, hold dances, or just hang out. They have already
raised $6,000 and hope to raise more at a Battle of the Bands contest on May
8 and 9, and during a hike planned for August.
Group members were unanimously pleased with the conference.
About 60 people attended this year’s conference, which Levy hopes will
be the first of many.
“This type of initiative really helps to make people feel that what we’re
doing is important,” Levy says. “And having somebody like Tom Jackson
really validates the work we’re doing.”
Levy chairs the Nunavut chapter of the Canadian Volunteer Initiative, who donated
part of their budget to the event. First Air, the RCMP and others also contributed.
TOP
|