May 3, 2002
Students stay awake for
a cause
24-hour wake-a-thon
raises money for Iqaluit shelter
MIRIAM
HILL
Iqaluits Qimaavik
womens shelter is on its way to getting the commercial mixer its kitchen
desperately needs, thanks to some Grade 7 students at Aqsarniit School.
After securing sponsors
earlier in the week, two classes of Grade 7 students came to school April 19
at 7 p.m. and didnt leave for 12 hours. The wake-a-thon, which required
the students to stay awake for 24 hours, raised more than $2,200 for the shelter.
Trish Hughes-Wieczorek,
the executive director of the Baffin Regional Agvvik Society, which runs the
womens shelter, was at the school last Friday to accept the handmade cheque.
"I didnt realize
they had raised so much money," she admitted in an interview after the
presentation.
Qimaavik opened in 1986
as a shelter for women who face violence, and has increased its bed-space capacity
by 45 per cent in the past decade. Hughes-Wieczorek said the shelter runs on
about $455,000 a year in core funding from the Department of Health. Other contribution
agreements and community donations help to pick up any extra slack.
Qimaavik is the only transition
house in Nunavut and employs three full-time and three part-time workers.
The money raised by the
students will go toward the purchase of a commercial mixer, which the cook at
the shelter has requested, to grind caribou meat donated by hunters and to use
in preparing other foods, including dough for baked goods.
The shelter also received
more than $6,000 last month from a Jail n Bail fundraiser held during
the Arctic Winter Games by parole and RCMP officers.
"It amazes me how
broad-based the support [for the shelter] is," Hughes-Wieczorek said, "from
Grade 7 students to parole officers."
The show of support came
not long after an episode in the legislative assembly when an MLA questioned
the appropriateness of a system that allows a woman to be separated from her
husband, even though he may be abusive. The couple should have counselling together,
he suggested.
Hughes-Wieczorek did not
wish to talk about the issue, but said she thought the shelter always had support,
but sometimes it was hard to see.
"In a high stress
workplace you tend to get tunnel vision and end up focusing on the negative,"
she said, "when there are hundreds of people out there who want us to do
well."
To receive such overwhelming
support from Grade 7 students is wonderful, she said, especially since they
are at an impressionable age and are starting to show an interest in dating.
Thirteen-year-old Eric
Guimond was one of the students who watched movies, played video games and stayed
up for 24 hours. He said he knows the money he raised will go to help people.
"I heard they were
saving lives," he said.
Teachers Rodney Corkum
and Carol Horn chaperoned the event, which was inspired by a class on current
events. Corkhum handed out an article on the shelter and the class discussed
relationships, how they dont always work out and the concept of abusive
relationships. The fundraiser was a natural follow-up, he said.
"I thought it would
make it hit home," he said, "make it real."
Jennifer Naglingniq, 12,
said that for the first time she and her classmates were able to run around
the halls of the school and make as much noise as they wanted, but she said,
she realized the event was for a good cause.
"Sometimes people
need help and thats what we did."
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