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May 3, 2002
All is well at the North
Pole
Canadian Rangers return
from sovereignty mission
MIRIAM
HILL
Cpl. Joe Amarualik has
been having some trouble sleeping since he returned from guiding nearly 30 Canadian
Rangers safely to and from the magnetic North Pole.
"There was so much
quiet around the building because of the walls, it was kind of hard to sleep
for some people including myself," he said from his home community of Resolute
Bay. "It was quiet and warm, after two weeks of living in a tent and hearing
everything."
Amarualik, 30 Rangers and
three headquartered members of 1 Canadian Ranger Patrol Group left Resolute
April 9 on snow machines, and sped toward the goal of reaching the magnetic
Pole and helping assert Canadas sovereignty in the North.
Seven days and 800 kilometres
later, the motorcade of snow machines stopped about 10 kilometres north of Ellef
Ringnes Island and a couple of kilometers south of an expanse of the Arctic
sea which opened in front of the patrol. They reached the outer edge of the
Pole before deciding, in the interests of safety, to return to Cape Isachsen
and set up camp at midnight.
The patrol answered satellite
phone calls from Prime Minister Jean Chrétien and Defence Minister Art
Eggleton , who offered their congratulations and thanks for the mission. To
maintain its sovereignty in far-reaching places, the Canadian government must
prove Canadian interests are using the space. This patrol, which marked the
60th anniversary of the Rangers, was the largest in terms of participants and
kilometres covered.
It was by far the largest
group Amarualik has guided, too.
"Leading this many
people for such a great distance was challenging," he said. "I felt
a tremendous amount of responsibility to keep them all safe." The weather
cooperated most of the way, he said, except for the wind and brief whiteout
conditions on the return trip.
Levi Qaunaq, of Igloolik,
had a smile on his face the whole way back to Resolute, thanks to a surprise
presentation by Col. Kevin McLeod at Cape Isachsen. Qaunaq was awarded the Canadian
Forces Decoration for 12 years of service as a Ranger. The location of the medal
presentation was unique in Canadian Forces history.
Qaunaq said he has actually
been a ranger for 15 years, and was thrilled and shocked to be singled out.
"I was overwhelmed,"
he said in Inuktitut. "So touched that I was in tears."
Emotions ran high at the
Pole. Commissioner Peter Irniq, in Resolute Sunday for a community feast, mentioned
in his speech the actions of Johnassie Inuktuluk, of Sanikiluaq, "who,
in great excitement and joy at arriving at the pole was moved to climb an iceberg
and raise his parka and shirt to the skies."
The mood continued when
the Rangers returned to Resolute on April 24, two days ahead of schedule.
"The community came
out, there were people at the beach, people where we were going to park and
people all over town," Amarualik said. "The best part of our trip
was reaching our objective, the magnetic North Pole. But for me the best part
was when my feet touched the beach in town."
Rangers began leaving the
community on Monday and Amarualik said it made him feel sad to see the people
he spent so much time with leaving.
"After hanging around
with them I sort of feel alone now," he said, adding the community will
feel smaller after theyve gone.
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