May 6, 2005
Video demonstrates elders' approach to dealing with criminals
"We
need to work with these people instead of just sending them to court"
GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS
Thomas Langmann, a supervisor at the Baffin Correctional Centre, looks down
over Elisapee Kilabuk and Chris Freeman during a mediation exercise at the elders
centre in Iqaluit. (PHOTO BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
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Community groups across Nunavut can soon sit down with a video teaching them
how elders would use age-old techniques to resolve crimes today.
Iqaluit's restorative justice society is launching the video in an effort to
put a more Inuit touch on alternative approaches to justice in the territory.
The society, known as Amaat Katimajiit, takes accused criminals sent to them
by the courts, to resolve conflicts in the community that don't involve a high
level of violence. The accused criminals are usually young offenders.
Myna Ishuluktak, the government of Nunavut's liaison for the society, said
the elders and trained mediators follow Inuit traditions in resolving the conflicts,
in a way that the court system doesn't.
"I think Inuit need to take more control," she said. "We need
to work with those people instead of just sending them to court."
Ishuluktak helped host a two-day workshop at the elders centre in Iqaluit last
week, with elders, social workers from around the territory, and a senior prison
official. Participants came from various communities, including Rankin Inlet,
Pond Inlet, Kimmirut and Pangnirtung.
The society hopes to turn the workshop recordings into a series of videos that
will answer two questions - "What is Restorative Justice?" and "How
should mediation be conducted?" - by showing participants in hypothetical
mediation sessions.
Ishuluktak said the videos will show that the key to a successful mediation
session involves keeping an open mind about why an offender got into trouble.
"Sometimes, we don't try to understand where they're coming from,"
Ishuluktak said. "Sometimes, we're just judging them, and so we don't understand."
If they can find funding, the society will release a third video, focusing
on how elders used to settle conflicts, before the arrival of the criminal justice
system.
Annie Nattaq, an elder from Iqaluit, sees restorative justice as "Inuit
counselling." Nattaq is co-chair of the society, and participates in the
group of elders who meet with offenders who admit to low-level crimes like vandalism
or break-ins.
"People want to use more Inuit traditional ways now," Nattaq said
in an interview in Inuktitut. "We are a committee who wants to help our
fellow Inuit people.
"We also want to learn more how to help the best way we can."
Nattaq remembers Inuit had a highly personalized approach to resolving conflict,
before judges and lawyers arrived.
She said elders and community members would gather in a circle around the person
who stole something, or did harm to someone else. The person in the middle would
speak about what happened, and listen to the community's reaction.
Nattaq said Inuit are careful to ask about whether the crime was committed
because the person has personal problems, such as mental illness.
She said it's also important to make a connection between the offender and
the community circle.
For example, if the accused person lowers his head in shame, a person from
the circle would approach him and lift up his chin, until he made eye contact
with them.
"If we can open up the person we're dealing with, that's the important
part," Nattaq said.
Workshop participants found the Inuit approach to resolving conflict isn't
very different from the "restorative justice" model being increasingly
promoted in schools for discipline, and in aboriginal communities around Canada.
That model stresses the importance of solutions coming from the community,
without resorting to heavy punishments.
Chris Freeman, a workshop facilitator from Winnipeg, said he was impressed
with how much emphasis the elders put on forgiving a person, after they've owned
up to their harmful actions.
"If someone did something wrong, they held them accountable," Freeman
said. "They say 'now that you've done what you needed to do, you will not
be reminded of it again.
"'You're welcome back in the community.'"
The video is due to be released across Nunavut by September. The $30,000 in
funding for the project comes from the GN department of justice.
Translation by Itee Akavak.
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