April 7, 2006
Inuit Relations Secretariat
loses interim director
Donat Savoie retires
after 36 years with DIAND
JANE
GEORGE
Retiring
civil servant Donat Savoie was honoured at Makivik Corp.'s annual general meeting
in Kangirsuk this week. Makivik president Pita Aatami presented Savoie with
a plaque, a Cruise North vacation for two, as well as a T-shirt, hat and rubber
boots to wear on next summer's cruise. "I'm leaving and I'm not leaving,"
said Savoie, who will continue as the federal government's chief Nunavik government
negotiator. "So I'll be back wearing these boots." (PHOTO BY JANE
GEORGE)
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Nunavik loses a long-time
friend in Ottawa with the retirement today of Donat Savoie, interim executive
director of the Inuit Relations Secretariat and chief federal negotiator for
Nunavik self-government.
"The 36 years I have
spent in the public service of Canada, and nearly exclusively with the Department
of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, have brought a lot of fun and many nice
accomplishments," Savoie said in a farewell email sent to many of his acquaintances
last month.
April 7 marks the end of
Savoie's assignment at the Inuit Relations Secretariat in Ottawa, and the end
of his career as a federal civil servant, though he will continue on contract
as negotiator for another two years for the Nunavik government file.
Savoie, who has become
a familiar face to many Inuit in northern Canada, first arrived in the Eastern
Arctic on May 3, 1967. That's when he came to the Ungava Bay community of Kangiqsualujjuaq,
then known as George River.
"I then developed
a great interest and passion for the Canadian and circumpolar North and the
Inuit," Savoie said.
Savoie plans to continue
his interest and involvement in the North after he leaves the federal civil
service.
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 George River, in
1967, where he lived with Tivi Etok and his family.
"By allowing myself
to be integrated into this family and village, I learned a great deal about
the Inuit way of life, their values, and the difficulties they faced daily in
their quest for food and family essentials. This was an opportunity for me to
witness not only their capacity to survive but their creative responses to many
obstacles."
Savoie said he was lucky
to later work and be trained by people who were dedicated to the Canadian North,
including Moose Kerr, the late L.A.C.O. Hunt, the late Graham Rowley, Professor
Rémi Savard of the Université de Montréal, Professor Louis-Edmond
Hamelin, founder of the Northern Studies Centre of Laval University, Marc-Adélard
Tremblay, a professor Emeritus of Université Laval, and Brigadier General
Keith Greenaway.
But Etok was the person
who influenced Savoie the most in his thinking and career.
"I owe Tivi a lot
and I consider him a great person, a very important elder Inuit, a philosopher
and an outstanding educator and teacher," Savoie said.
Although he is known mainly
for his work with the federal government, Savoie continued his scholarly pursuits.
He studied the archives left by Emile Petitot, an Oblate missionary and explorer
who lived with the Dene from 1862 to 1882. 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 chief organizer for the visit of the late Pope John Paul
II to Fort Simpson, NWT.
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
was Ottawa's chief negotiator on many negotiating teams.
Makivik Corporation plans
to honour Savoie during the upcoming annual general meeting, April 4 to 7, in
Kangirsuk.
Mary Jobin Oates, an Inuk
originally from Kuujjuaraapik, who completed a law degree at University of Toronto's
Osgoode Law School, will replace Savoie as the interim executive director of
the Inuit Secretariat.
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