April 8, 2005
Youth centre has kids
dancing all the way to Florida
Activity-packed programs
offer everything from Scouts to public speaking
JANE
GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
This
July dancers from Kuujjuaq's Youth Centre will be performing this jazzy dance
routine with traditional elements at Orlando's Sea World. (PHOTOS BY JANE GEORGE)
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Bright lights are shining
in Kuujjuaq - and to see them, just head over to the community's Uvikkait Dome
centre for youth aged six and up.
The lights are right there
in the eyes of a group of star-struck young dancers who will be heading off
to Orlando, Fla.'s Sea World this July.
"They will have the
opportunity to perform in front of thousands of spectators at the Arctic Pavilion,"
says Jennifer Matchett, director of Kuujjuaq's youth centre. "It's very
exciting."
For months, Matchett worked
with 14 dancers from the youth centre, teaching them a complex dance routine,
which she calls "a traditional spin on a jazz dance."
It was challenging for
the dancers to master all the moves - and practices required hours of rehearsal
after school and on weekends.
But the resulting dance
number is a fast-moving, jazzy combination of modern dance and throat-singing,
set to a song by singer Beatrice Deer from Quaqtaq.
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This
Girl Guide has several badges, which recognize achievement in various activities.
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Matchett sent a video of
the perfected routine to Seaworld, and an invitation for the group to perform
there this summer soon followed.
"It's going to be
a great experience," says Matchett. "And, in the future, they're going
to be much more self-confident in what they can do and do do."
The dance squad has been
fund-raising in order to make the trip to Orlando from July 7 to July 9, by
selling T-shirts and organizing other events.
"We would like to
give a huge thank-you to Kuujjuaq Pinguatitslijingit (Kuujjuaq Recreation Committee)
for their continued support, because without them the girls and boy would not
have raised enough money to take this opportunity," Matchett says.
Another group from the
Youth Centre is also raising money, so about 30 Girl Guides and Pathfinders
can all attend a week-long Girl Guide camp in the Laurentians next August.
"We have this idea
that no one should be left out," Matchett says. "And that's what we
base everything at the youth centre on."
You might think that, with
15 hours of jazz, ballet and tap dance lessons offered every week at the youth
centre, girls wouldn't have time to get involved in other activities, but the
troops for Brownies, Girl Guides and Pathfinders have proven to be a huge success
in Kuujjuaq: school-aged children now come through the community's child care
system keen to participate in organized group activities.
Jennifer
Matchett, the director of the Uvikkait Youth Centre, is always looking for ways
to help young people in Kuujjuaq feel good about what they do and excel at the
same time.
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"The Girl Guides started
with six participants - now there are 29!" says Matchett.
An afternoon get-together
of Girl Guides and Pathfinders, for girls 9-14, fills the centre's basement
crafts room to capacity. Each patrol - the Ptarmigans, Caribou, Beluga and Muskox
- has its own table and everyone is wearing the blue or green uniforms that
identify them as either Girl Guides or the older Pathfinders. Many sport the
coveted badges earned through successfully accomplishing various activities
or craft projects.
The youth centre also has
many activities for boys, including Boy Scouts and karate and boxing classes.
And the centre is not just
for younger kids, although Matchett says it's been tough to attract many older
teens because they don't want to be seen hanging out with younger kids.
But she's always looking
for new ways to get more teens involved.
Take the Mr. and Miss Teen
Kuujjuaq contest. The lead-up to this annual pageant involves skill competitions,
public speaking and a talent show, all designed to show teenagers their potential
"to do anything you want to do and be anything you want to be."
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Visitors
to Sea World will also have the chance to hear throat singing by this young
duo from Kuujjuaq.
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The winners of this year's
Miss and Mr. Teen Kuujjuaq Pageant, held in February, were: Mae Johannes as
Miss Teen Kuujjuaq, Taqralik Kauki as First Princess, Darlene David as Second
Princess, Susan Nulukie as Miss Friendship and Louisa Suppa as Miss Talent.
Devon Pearson was crowned
Mr. Teen Kuujjuaq. His First Prince was Sailasie Kooktook and the Second Prince
and Mr. Friendship was Mark Snowball.
Olivia Ikey, 15, who was
selected as Miss Teen Kuujjuaq 2003, says the pageant experience was a lot of
fun.
A booklet that was distributed
at that year's pageant gives an eye-opening glimpse of the hopes and aspirations
of young Kuujjuamiut.
"Olivia's favourite
colours are black and gray. She likes the summer, driving around and swimming.
In the future, Olivia would like to be a lawyer, but she would miss her mother,
as she is the most important person in her life. Olivia says that if she had
a million dollars she would move to the Bahamas with her family."
Other pageant participants
said if they had a million dollars, they would give money to refugees, "buy
a house, truck, new clothes and go to Montreal and Quebec City" and "move
to Hawaii, have two butlers, buy two cars" and a business designing clothes.
Also for teenagers at the
centre there's a chance to experience what's it's like to be a teen parent.
They're given an egg to take care of for a week, so they can live first-hand
the problems involved in becoming a parent.
A Homework Club and Movie
Night round out the centre's regular full week of activities.
Thanks to organizational
and financial support from Kuujjuaq and Quebec, the tireless Matchett isn't
alone at the centre: there are also two coordinators, Hullik Siquoraluk and
Alacie Snowball, as well as other part-time youth assistants.
As the popularity of the
centre continues to grow, Matchett says what the centre really needs is more
funding, a larger facility for teenagers to have their own space and a greater
number of volunteers from the community to help with activities.
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