April 7, 2006
Violence at home aired
in Kitikmeot classrooms
Story-poster contest
brings domestic violence into the open
SARA
MINOGUE
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Suzi
Power of Kugluktuk created a winning poster that says domestic violence is caused
by drinking, drugs, stress at work, and fighting over money.
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Domestic violence is huge,
but the victims - frightened children who hide when their parents are fighting
- are small, and so are the resources available to tackle the problem.
Violence between couples
or parents is behind almost all of the legal cases that come to the Kitikmeot
Law Centre in Cambridge Bay, yet the lawyers who work there see few public programs
aimed at reducing violence in homes.
Instead of waiting for
the Government of Nunavut to tackle the problem, lawyers Karen Wilford and Peter
Harte decided to use some of their resources to help kids talk about family
violence and how it affects the entire family.
That fits within their
mandate to deliver public legal education, but more importantly, it meets a
huge need in a region where "very, very many children are having to grow
up too early," Wilford said.
The pair have arranged
school visits to Grade 6 classrooms across the region, where RCMP, counselors,
courtworkers and lawyers meet to discuss domestic violence, how it affects families,
and what kids can do when they see violence. Kids then break into groups to
make their own lists of causes and potential solutions to violence at home.
Communities benefit in
two ways.
Kids who get a chance to
talk about domestic violence get to speak their minds, and have their experiences
validated by others who have shared the same misfortune.
Parents get an opportunity
to hear how their behavior affects their children, and perhaps consider making
some changes.
So far, the project has
visited schools in Kugluktuk and Cambridge Bay. The next stop is Taloyoak in
May.
School visits include poster
and story contests, with prizes awarded for the best of each.
"We want to make it
ok for kids to discuss their concerns about family violence," said Kugluktuk
RCMP Cst. Kristen DeWulf in a press release. "We have to get this problem
out of the shadows if we are going to solve it."
Where children are concerned,
cost shouldn't be a factor, but it always is.
In this case, however,
Harte does most of the legwork while traveling the court circuit defending legal
aid clients, drawing on the good will of teachers, counselors, cops and justice
workers who agree to participate.
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