July 16,
2004
Nunavik rocks Norway
Canadian musicians,
filmmakers and food headline Sámi festival
JANE GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Elisapie Isaac of
Salluit was a star performer at Riddu Riddu. After her recently released CD,
Taima, was greeted with rave reviews, Isaac also performed at the recent Glastonbury
rock festival in southern England. PHOTOS BY STEIN BERNTZEN
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Nunavik performers had enthusiastic audiences at last week's Riddu Riddu festival
in Arctic Norway, where attendance at the circumpolar arts, music and culture
bash broke all previous records.
Over four days and nights, Riddu Riddu, which means stormy wind off the water
in the Sámi language, featured the best of Nunavik's performing arts
at its outdoor stage, located in the shadow of the surrounding mountains.
About 20 Nunavimmiut, including Adamie Alaku, vice-president of Makivik Corporation,
and Rhoda Kokiapik, executive director of Avataq Cultural Institute, travelled
to Manndalen, located north of the city of Tromsø in northern Norway.
At
Riddu Riddu's Nunavik Day last week, Nordic festival-goers enjoyed caribou stew
and other treats. PHOTOS BY STEIN BERNTZEN
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Riddu Riddu 2004 included a line-up of well-known Nunavik musicians, including
Taima, with Elisapie Isaac and Alain Auger, Edward Snowball and his band Sinuupa,
Maaki Putulik and Laina Grey with their throatsinging duo Puppuq as well as
throatsingers Akinisie Sivuaraapik and Evie Mark.
"They gave excellent concerts and they charmed people," Riddu Riddu
president Henrik Olsen said after the festival had wrapped up.
To Riddu Riddu from Nunavut came Tanya Tagaq Gillis. Gillis, who has recorded
with the popular Icelandic rocker Björk, performed with Origami Arktika,
a band from Oslo that played acoustic rock, with improvised segments and throatsinging.
"Tanya also did a very exciting show," Olsen said.
Throat-singer
Evie Mark and the Makivik Corp.'s vice president of economic development, Adamie
Alaku, doubled as models in a fashion show featuring Vickie Okpik's designs,
which the Norwegian media called both sexy and warm.PHOTOS BY STEIN BERNTZEN
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Other events included a Nunavik Day, with a traditional food tasting and fashion
show, featuring designs by Vickie Okpik of Nunavik Creations as well as workshops
with Puvirnituq carver Joshua Sivuaraapik, dollmaker Elisapee Inukpuk from Inukjuak
and Kuujjuaq printmaker Victoria Grey.
At the Riddu Riddu film festival, several films from and about Nunavik were
also screened.
Every year, Riddu Riddu reaches out to other circumpolar regions and indigenous
peoples to spotlight the music, art and culture from one particular northern,
indigenous people. Thanks to interest generated from Puppuq's performance last
summer, Nunavik Inuit were invited as the festival's featured indigenous people
of 2004.
Riddu Riddu worked closely with Makivik and Avataq to organize the performances
and apply for funding to pay for the trip. The Canada Council, Quebec arts council,
le Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec, Quebec's department for
culture and communications, the Canadian embassy in Oslo, the federal department
of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, First Air and Air Inuit all gave
money, so that Nunavik could be showcased at Riddu Riddu.
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Sámi singer
Mari Boine, who has 12 hit albums to her credit, was a headline performer at
Riddu Riddu 2004, which featured performers from Nunavik, northern Europe, Siberia,
New Zealand and Africa.PHOTOS BY STEIN BERNTZEN
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"It went very well. I think we have made very good relations between Sámi
and Nunavik for the future. Some of the performers will come back. There are
exciting things we will follow up on for sure," Olsen said.
Sámi activists started the Riddu Riddu festival 13 years ago as a way
of preserving their own endangered culture in Arctic Europe. Sámi, who
number 100,000, continue to struggle for political and cultural recognition
in Norway, Finland, Sweden and Russia.
Some Sámi now consider Riddu Riddu to have more political importance
than Norway's Sámi Parliament or the Nordic Sámi Council. This
year Sámi political leaders, including Sven Roald-Nystø, president
of the Norwegian Sámi Parliament, and Ole-Henrik Magga, who heads the
United Nations Permanent Forum for Indigenous Issues, were both on hand to underline
the festival's importance to the North.
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