July 16,
2004
Happy fifth, Nunavut
Pancakes, T-shirts,
and fun for all on Nunavut Day
JANE GEORGE
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The RCMP Central Marching
Band led off the Nunavut Day parade. (PHOTOS BY JANE GEORGE)
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A bright, sunny warm day provided the perfect backdrop for Nunavut's fifth
birthday party on July 9, a civic holiday in the territorial capital.
The legislature building was decked out with bunches of multi-coloured balloons,
and Nunavut Premier Paul Okalik was in a similarly cheerful mood as he started
the day by cooking up hundreds of pancakes with Nunavut Tunngavik President
Paul Kaludjak at the back of the legislative building.
Crowds packed the legislature's parking lot to line up for breakfast, hot dogs
or T-shirts honouring Nunavut Day.
To enter the spirit of the day, many immediately put on their new T-shirts
and put Nunavut-flag decals on their cheeks.
Alan Kingdon, who was dressed in flag-coloured clown gear, handed out small
Nunavut flags, which several people stuck in their hair as decorations.
Then, to the rousing sound of the visiting RCMP Central Marching Band, a parade
featuring Canadian Rangers and former students of the Gordon Robertson Educational
Centre in town for a reunion proceeded from the Cadet Hall to Nakasuk School.
Alan
Kingdon handed out Nunavut Day flags and smiles.
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In front of the school, Okalik, Kaludjak, Iqaluit Mayor Elisapie Sheutiapik,
QIA President Thomassie Alikatuktuk and Jonah Kelly, the master-of-ceremonies,
were on hand to meet and greet the parade.
"We have many challenges," Kaludjak said in his address to the gathering.
Nunavut Day, he said, is a chance for Nunavummiut to look back and ahead to
the future, a future that will require hard work if the territory is to develop
even more rapidly.
But Kaludjak said Nunavut Day is, above all, a time to celebrate Nunavut's
achievements.
In her welcome, Sheutiapik mentioned several of the "firsts" that
have marked Nunavut's first five years of existence: the first hockey player
in the National Hockey League, first hit movie, Atanarjuat, the first crop of
graduate nurses and the first female Inuk mayor of Iqaluit.
A
relaxed chef, Premier Paul Okalik took time off to flip hundreds of pancakes
for a Nunavut Day breakfast.
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But fun, not politics, was more the order of the day, as Kelly repeatedly said
to the crowd, "Quviassuluta?" and "Are we having a good time?"
"I'm just here to have some fun," Okalik said to the crowd.
Band music, square dancing, country food, games, a bicycle rodeo and prizes
rounded out Nunavut Day's activities, and by mid-afternoon, the tired party-goers
headed home, balloons in hand.
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