July 15, 2005
Its fun, fun,
fun on Nunavut Day
Nunavummiut dance, feast
and enjoy life
JANE
GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Hundreds
of Iqalungmiut flocked to Nakasuk Schools front yard on Nunavut Day last
Saturday to laugh, feast and enjoy an old-fashioned Inuktitut-style dance. (PHOTO
BY JIM BELL)
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Mounds of hotdogs, toy
sailboat races, Inuit games, cribbage tournaments, fishing derbies, parades
and square dances: this is how Nunavut residents celebrated July 9, Nunavut
Day.
In Iqaluit, Oleepeeka Veevee
sang a rousing version of Happy Birthday in English and Inuktitut
as an opening to the days festivities. Soon, hundreds of Iqalungmiut were
jigging to the Iqaluit Bands accordion music.
Sunny, if a bit cool, weather
marked Nunavut Day activities in the territorys capital, which started
with a pancake breakfast served behind the legislative assembly building.
A line of chefs, including
Nunavut Premier Paul Okalik, Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. president Paul Kaludjak,
Iqaluits mayor Elisapee Sheutiapik and Iqaluit MLAs Hunter Tootoo and
Ed Picco, skillfully flipped pancakes for hundreds of hungry early-risers.
Also on hand was a special
chef Thomas Berger, wearing a Nunavut Day apron.
Berger, a renowned human
rights lawyer and judge, was appointed May 26 as a conciliator to help resolve
a four-year dispute over a new 10-year contract for the implementation of the
Nunavut land claims agreement.
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For
Inusiq Shoo and two young friends, it was thumbs up for Nunavut Day in Iqaluit
last Saturday. (PHOTO BY JIM BELL)
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And on Nunavut Day, which
commemorates the anniversary of the land claims signing, the message from
NTI to beneficiaries was for them to have patience.
Implementation takes
a long time, Kaludjak told the gathering in Nunavut. Its because
we want to do things right.
In his opening remarks,
Okalik said Nunavut is cooperating more than ever with NTI, but his main message
to the crowd was for everyone to enjoy themselves an easy order to follow
on what Okalik called a made-to-order day the sixth Nunavut
Day since Nunavuts creation in 1999.
Nunavut
Day fun-seekers in Iqaluit gobbled up piles of barbecued hot dogs under the
bright summer sun. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)
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For Miss Nunavut 2005,
Fauna Kingdon of Iqaluit, Nunavut Day marked the beginning of a nerve-wracking
week of events leading up to the Miss World Canada
pageant tomorrow night in Toronto.
Kingdon spent Nunavut Day
behind a table in Iqaluits Northmart store, where she continued her fundraising
for the Canadian Cancer Society. As part of the Miss World Canada competition,
each contestant is raising money to support childhood cancer research: the total
amount each raises will be counted in the contestants evaluation.
Fauna
Kingdon, Miss Nunavut 2005, used Nunavut Day to raise funds for the Canadian
Cancer Society. Shes competing in the Miss World Canada competition in
Toronto this weekend. (PHOTO BY JIM BELL)
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Miss World Canada judges
will also rate Kingdon on her response to personal interviews, her overall fitness
and grace in swimsuit and evening gown competitions.
The pageants theme
is beauty with a purpose
Its not only
about having a pretty face and a nice body: It tests how confident you are,
says Kingdon, a graduate of Inuksuk High School who is now in her fourth year
of accounting studies at the University of Manitoba.
Kingdon is at ease on the
winners podium: she also won the Youth prize at the 2005 National Aboriginal
Achievement Awards and was a 2004-2005 National Aboriginal Youth Role Mode.
This summer, Kingdon is working for the GNs finance department.
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Nunavut
Premier Paul Okalik, Iqaluit Mayor Elisapee Sheutiapik, and Iqaluit East MLA
Ed Picco serving hot pancakes to a long line of hungry Iqalungmiut who queued-up
for a Nunavut Day breakfast put on by the GN and NTI. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)
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During the pageant preliminaries
this week, Kingdon planned to hand out information packets about Nunavut. If
she wins the Miss World Canada title, shell take a year off school and
compete in the global pageant in China.
If I do win, Ill
be an international ambassador for Nunavut, Kingdon said.
For more information on
how to help Miss Nunavut win, go to http://www.missworldcanada.com and click
on beauty with as purpose logo to donate to the Canadian Cancer
Society.
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