March 8, 2002
The one foot
high kick, like the Alaskan high kick, is a test of power, coordination and
balance.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF THE IQALUIT ARCTIC WINTER GAMES HOST SOCIETY)
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Survival of the fittest
AWGs flame burning
bright for Nunavummiut
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Stevie Amarualiks
right leg shoots toward a sealskin target 2.1 metres off the ground while his
left foot remains planted on the ground.
The crowd erupts into heartfelt
cheers and thunderous applause. Not only has the 16-year-old Resolute Bay teen
set a Baffin Games record in the Alaskan high kick, the determined youth
has set an overall Games record by winning seven gold medals in a half-dozen
Arctic sport events.
The spirited scene in Cape
Dorset last September is a scene Amarualik hopes to repeat at the 2002 Arctic
Winter Games next week even with a broken right toe.
"Ill be ready
for sure," he said from his home in Resolute Bay. Amarualik broke his big
toe a week ago during practice. Even so, his goal is to capture one gold and
two silver medals.
"As the Games get
closer, I get more excited," Amarualik said.
The 2002 Arctic Winter
Games March 17-23 in Iqaluit and Nuuk, Greenland is about firsts:
One way to cure
or perhaps create a headache is the head pull. The game's object is to pull
a headband off an opponent's head. The event is more a test of endourance then
strength.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF THE IQALUIT ARCTIC WINTER GAMES HOST SOCIETY)
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the first time an
event of this size and scope has come to Nunavut;
the first time the
Games opening ceremony will be televised nationally:
the first time the
cultural program budget is as big as the athletic program budget;
and the first time
in the Games 32-year history that two cities are co-hosting the Games.
Athletes will compete in
nine events divided into three categories: major sport (such as hockey and basketball);
Northern sport (Inuit and Dene Games); and emerging sport (snowboarding). Team
Nunavuts 242 athletes are participating in all nine events except curling
this year.
Hosting has its benefits
Goo Arlooktoo, an AWG Host
Society board member, says investing in the Games is an investment in the future.
Arlooktoo believes the
Games drive home a sense of pride in athletes, cultural performers, coaches,
referees volunteers, media and spectators.
Arlooktoo takes a deep
breath when asked about lasting legacies.
"A few years ago throat-singing
was a disappearing art form. Its recently made a comeback, which will
be greatly supported by these Games. Its very exciting. Iqaluit has never
had a challenge like this. We have the new AWG complex two re-floored school
gyms of international quality for basketball and gymnastic tournaments and hundreds
volunteers trained as coaches, officials and security. We will end up with a
more caring community-oriented place," he says.
Just two years after hosting
the 2000 AWG, Whitehorse, Yukon, the city is bidding for the 2007 Canada Winter
Games.
"Were definitely
using the Arctic Winter Games to show the selection committee we are more than
capable of hosting the Canada Winter Games," says Anne Grainger, marketing
director for the 2000 AWG in Whitehorse.
How it all started
The AWG began in 1967.
A lack of young Northern athletes competing at a national level caught the attention
of Stuart Hodgson and James Smith, then the Commissioners of the Northwest Territories
and Yukon.
Equally troubling, they
noted, was a lack of gyms, swimming pools and ice rinks required to train such
athletes.
In 1970, Yellowknife hosted
the first Arctic Winter Games. Three regions participated: the NWT, Yukon and
Alaska. Two years later, Greenland and northern Quebec hopped on board, although
northern Quebec, now called Nunavik, dropped out in 1976. Several years later
the Soviet Union, now Russia, joined, as well as northern Alberta.
Since the 1980s, the Games
have rotated between Yellowknife, Whitehorse, Alaska and northern Alberta.
Nunavik was re-admitted
as a guest participant in 2000, and will also compete as a guest participant
this year, with a team of 32 athletes.
From the knuckle-hop to
snowboarding, the AWG events are a test of strength, speed, and endurance. The
traditional Games are rooted to communal, nomadic communities whose survival
depended on co-operation, accuracy and pain resistance.
Unlike the Olympics, AWG
competitors typically applaud each other from the sidelines. Indeed, the most
coveted prize is the Hodgson trophy: an award given to the region exhibiting
exceptional sportsmanship and fair play.
Nunavut athletes cheered
their way to win the 2000 trophy. The exceptional accomplishment was particularly
notable given it was the first time Nunavut sent a team to the AWG.
In addition to the sport
contingent, each region brings cultural performers. When the gyms and arenas
settle down at night, throat-singers, drum dancers and storytellers will take
centre stage.
Iqaluit Mayor John Matthews
says hes delighted by the prospect of showing off Iqaluit to the rest
of the country.
"We felt that representation
should be given to the eastern Arctic, especially to Nunavut because it was
a new territory," Matthews says of the citys bid.
"Were hopeful
the whole experience will generate spin off economic activity. People, especially
people in Southern Canada will see Nunavut and say hey, lets go up and
visit."
All eyes on Iqaluit
In less than two weeks,
rinks and restaurants on both sides of Baffin Bay will buzz with conversations
in seven languages: Inuktitut, French, English, Greenlandic, Danish, Russian
and Innuinaqtun.
Stevie Amarualik will be
one of those voices. He is also one of the many reasons why the Games will live
on long after the Games are over.
The traditional skills
Amarualiks learned through competition have long-term effects, he says.
Hes maintaining his fitness, developing discipline, meeting new friends
and learning about fair play things that will help in later life, whether
as an Arctic Winter Games competitor, an employee, a parent or a mentor.
"The Games have taught
me to be disciplined, committed and focused," Amarualik said.
A similar version of this
story appeared in the spring 2002 edition of Le Toit du Monde
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