August 19, 2005
Fighting suicide with
paddles and persuasion
Youth use kayaks to
spread message of hope
SARA
MINOGUE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Six
young Nunavimmiut are kayaking a third of the way around the Nunavik coast this
summer, spreading a positive message to young people in five communities. (PHOTOS
BY JONATHAN GRENIER)
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In the middle of July,
six kayakers and two canoeists pulled up onto the beach in Umiujaq, a strange
thing for a community of 350 that's 180 km from the nearest village.
But the kayakers were greeted
by almost everyone in town. Quickly, they were on the radio, talking about the
first 180-km leg of a journey that will see 18 young Nunavimmiut traverse the
entire Nunavik coast, delivering their "Living Life" message to 14
distant communities.
Ainalik Qavavauk, Simon
Aliqu, Massiu Nayome, Ernest Fleming, Lucy Papialuk and Gilbert Innukpu are
mid-way through a six-week kayaking journey from Kuujjuaraapik to Akulivik.
In Inukjuak, the next stop
on the clockwise route, the same kayakers were greeted with a giant picnic,
where they played games and talked about their experience with suicide, and
as kayakers. This time the group was on the radio answering questions and telling
stories until 11 p.m. They went on the air again for four hours the next day.
Jonathan Grenier, treasurer
for Saputiit Youth Association, sums up the point of the trip in two short paragraphs
near the end of a presentation made to several sponsors:
"Suicide is and has
been a very sensitive subject in Nunavik for several years. There has been a
lot of research done to find the causes of suicide. Unfortunately these researches
have not yet successfully given us any answers.
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Instructor
David Rouault demonstrates kayaking techniques on the beach at Kuujjuarapik.
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"Saputiit believes
that a difference can be made by showing the youth that we are dedicated to
suicide prevention, that we are there to support them when they need it, and
to show them that people care about the youth in Nunavik."
It seems to be working.
The group has already heard many sad stories by sharing their own.
While in Inukjuak on Sunday,
the group went to church where several people went up to the front and told
their stories. A man in his thirties spoke freely about his own suicide attempt
a few years ago.
"That guy really poured
his heart out," says Shelly Watkins, Saputiit's suicide prevention coordinator,
who met the group as they arrived in Inukjuak. "He was crying because he
was so thankful for what they were doing."
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Simon
Aliqu keeps his balance as Rouault mimics a passing wave.
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Later that night, the kayakers
joined a procession of about 23 ATVs in a line, "just driving around slowly,
late at night," Watkins says.
"That was really nice."
Since July 12, the kayakers
have paddled from Kujjuaraapik to Umiujaq, Inukjuak and Puvirnituq. They plan
to make it to Akulivik by Aug. 23. Next summer a new group of youth will take
over the boats to go from Ivujivik around the cape to Quaqtaq. In 2007, six
more kayakers will travel from Kangirsuk to Kangirsualujjuaq.
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Kayakers
could spend over a week on the land between community visits.
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After visiting just two
villages, Watkins had already spoken with 50 or 60 youth who wanted to sign
on to paddle themselves next year. Those youth will all have to apply to Saputiit's
board of directors and explain why they want to go on the trip, if they are
to be selected.
The kayakers always travel
with two local guides, taking them from their own community to the next.
The method of transportation
for this expedition is no accident, says Saputiit president, Jonathan Epoo,
who hopes to promote the kayaking tradition as well.
Inuit invented the kayak.
In Nunavut, however, kayaking is now almost exclusively enjoyed by southerners,
who bring shiny new plastic or fibreglass kayaks with them from the South. Sporadic
projects have occurred in places like Pelly Bay, but are almost always generated
by southern kayaking enthusiasts.
John Macdonald, a retired
teacher and kayaking fan in Igloolik, recalls lessons led by the last of the
elders who recalled the delicate art of kayak construction.
In Nunavik, however, Inuit
were hunting and fishing by kayak as recently as 20 or 30 years ago.
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The
team, from left to right: Jonathan Grenier, Simon Aliqu, Ainalik Qavavauk, Lucy
Papialuk, Ernest Fleming, Matthew Nayume, Gilbert Innukpu, Rynee Kokiapik and
Shelly Watkins.
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To revive that tradition,
Saputiit started its kayaking project this spring with two kayak-building projects,
in Inukjuak and Umiujaq. Two kayaks were made, using a traditional frame with
fiberglass. The kayaks weren't quite ready for the trip this year, but will
be picked up by youth along the way.
In the meantime, the team
is using sleek new sea kayaks, which elders advised would be safer to use on
a long journey.
Epoo doesn't expect to
reverse the decline in kayaking overnight.
"There's a little
buzz going around in some of the communities they've been going to...,"
Epoo says. "Later down the road we hope to see more interest in the kayaks
and more use of it. It's a very important tradition."
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