December 16, 2005
Holiday kids party delivers gifts, good times
Its giving kids a chance to be kids
JOHN THOMPSON
Peter Clarke from the Tunijjusiarut Foundation stands with Eva Onalik from Canadian
North and her daughter, Paula, during the Christmas dinner and gift giveaway
held last Sunday. Clarke has been instrumental in shipping gifts to Nunavut
for 15 years, but this was the first time he was able to hand out presents in
person. It was a real thrill, he said. (PHOTO BY JOHN THOMPSON)
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Hundreds of children packed into Iqaluits Cadet Hall for hot meals and
Christmas gifts last Sunday.
Its the third year of the holiday dinner, and the biggest one yet, organized
by the citys foster parents and social workers.
This is the best year, by far, said Ambrose Ojah, a Government
of Nunavut social worker in Iqaluit, adding that more than 60 foster parents
volunteered to make the event happen.
These are the families we depend on to provide care and warmth and love
to children, who need to have that stuff given to them. And its a year-round
job. We salute them.
Once kids finished their turkey, ham and potato salad, they began to gather
around the piles of gifts: baby dolls, Batman action figures, toy trucks, foam
baseball bats and board games. As the mob grew impatient, the event could have
been mistaken a rock concert, rather than a holiday feast, as kids pressed and
pushed to get near Santa.
I was swarmed. I was being pushed back, said the man in the red
suit. Peter Clarke, 58, travelled from Victoria, British Columbia, to hand out
the gifts. For the past 15 years, hes helped organize shipments of toys
and sewing supplies to Iqaluit for Christmas, but this is the first time he
arrived in person to deliver them.
It was a real thrill, he said.
The project began with 75 toys sent to Baffin Regional Hospital, spurred by
a friend who worked in Iqaluit as a surgeon. Now over a tonne of toys and sewing
supplies are shipped to Iqaluit. From there, more boxes of gifts will be flown
to communities around the Baffin region this week.
Sewing machines and wool are gifts that keep giving, Clarke said, because they
help mothers provide their own clothing and toys for their families. They will
be distributed through social services offices in communities, which Clarke
hopes will have a spin-off effect: if social services offices become a place
to sew and socialize, maybe people will be less afraid to ask for help there
as well.
The toys and sewing supplies are paid for by donations to the Tunijjusiarut
Foundation, which Clarke helped establish. Using business savvy (hes a
financial adviser for Investors Group) and appeals to charity, he manages
to stretch $10,000 into a tonne of toys for Nunavummiut, operating with zero
overhead.
Im a money manager. Thats my job, I do things cheap,
he said.
Zellers provides toys at half price, while Canadian North flies those toys
from Edmonton to Iqaluit free of charge, and on to the other Baffin communities.
If I didnt have Canadian North, this wouldnt have happened,
period.
In Iqaluit, Northmart and Arctic Ventures donated food. As well, Marche Turenne
in Quebec donated turkeys, ham and cake to feed 500. And the Iqaluit Legion
donated their hall and a Santa outfit.
Were really a very small part of this. Everyone, everyone came
together on this one. The difference between having an idea, and having it happen,
is everyone else.
As a foster parent himself, Clarke said hes been around enough kids to
remain calm during Sundays gift-giving frenzy.
Its giving kids a chance to be kids, he said.
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