April 15, 2005
Savoie to lead new
Inuit secretariat
Career civil servant
has 30-year connection with Nunavik
JANE
GEORGE
Donat Savoie, a longtime
bureaucrat with the department of Indian and Northern Affairs and a well-known
figure in Nunavik, is the first director of the federal government's new Inuit
secretariat.
A spokesperson for DIAND
confirmed that Savoie is acting as the secretariat's director. DIAND has said
the appointment of a non-Inuk to the Inuit secretariat is an interim measure.
The secretariat, whose
creation was announced last April by Prime Minister Paul Martin, is a new special
office within DIAND devoted exclusively to Inuit issues.
A DIAND spokesman recently
said that the secretariat's director would have to possess "a strong knowledge
of the North, of Inuit culture and heritage and understanding the very broad
political and socio-economic factors in the North and in the Inuit communities."
Savoie has a 30-year connection
with Nunavik, which he has built and maintained over the years.
Savoie was born in Montreal
and received a master's degree from the Université de Montréal
in 1969.
For his masters' research
project, Savoie headed to the community of George River, now known as Kangiqsuajujjuaq,
in 1967.
There, Savoie lived for
eight months with the family of Tivi Etok, an experience that changed his life
and deeply affected his way of thinking.
"By allowing myself
to be integrated into the family and village, I learnt a great deal about the
Inuit way of life, their mode of thought, their values and the difficulties
they faced daily in a quest for food and family essentials. This was an opportunity
for me to witness not only their capacity to survive, but also their creative
response to many obstacles," Savoie says on a Nunavik government web site.
Soon after his return from
George River, Savoie joined DIAND.
But, at the same time,
Savoie continued his scholarly pursuits. He studied the archives left by Emile
Petitot, an Oblate missionary and explorer who lived from 1862 to 1882 with
the Dene. Savoie wrote two books and many articles on Petitot.
From 1977 to 1988, Savoie
served as DIAND's director of scientific and circumpolar affairs, where he was
responsible for the Northern Scientific Training Grants Program and relations
with other circumpolar countries.
In 1987, Savoie was the
federal government's head organizer for the visit of the late Pope John Paul
II to Fort Simpson, N.W.T.
Under the executive interchange
program of the Public Service of Canada, Savoie also worked as senior advisor
to Mary Simon, when she was president of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference.
In 1991, the Arctic Institute
of Canada named Savoie as an Arctic Fellow, honoring his contributions to knowledge
about the Arctic.
Over the years, Savoie
has been Ottawa's chief negotiator on many negotiating teams.
In 2000, he received a
public service award of Canada for his involvement in the negotiations leading
to the creation of Nunavut.
Savoie is now the head
of the federal negotiating team for self-government in Nunavik.
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