July 12, 2002
A territory celebrates
A day to give thanks
for the land and its people
NUNATSIAQ NEWS
Nunavut Day began with
a bang on Tuesday the sound of helium-filled balloons popping at the
Royal Canadian Legion Cadet Hall in the territorys capital.
Rain forced Nunavut Day
activities inside, but it didnt dampen the spirits of those who came out
for the noon feast and afternoon games. Commissioner Peter Irniq told the gathered
crowd never to forget where they came from.
"We must always acknowledge
our ancestors and elders," he said. "We are a nation of patient people
and through patience we have not only survived but have thrived."
Multi-coloured balloons
attached to hats and zippers bobbed throughout the crowd as people feasted on
seal, caribou stew, bannock and hot dogs.
Irniq said the territorys
people have a lot to be proud of "the creation of Nunavut and the
work our immediate ancestors and elders have done to allow my generation, those
55 years plus, to get information and knowledge from our land Nunavut,"
he said. "We have a feeling of ownership of our land and language."
Irniq couldnt emphasize
enough how proud he is to be both a Nunavummiut and a Canadian.
"Were working
to prepare Nunavut for the youth of tomorrow."
As the rain fell, Irniq
did admit there are challenges three years after the creation of Nunavut, including
a lack of employment and housing, but he pointed out that the territory is the
envy of other aboriginal groups in Canada and around the world.
Dinos Tikivik sat in a
chair in the hall with his eight-month-old daughter Malaya on his lap. He smiled
as he fed her tiny bits of bannock.
"Nunavut Day means
our land to me," he said simply. "Im just happy to be here again
and thankful for Canada being a free country.
Napatchie Lyta, standing
near the entrance to the hall, shared a similar sentiment.
"Its just about
celebrating our land," she said. "Its free and its fresh."
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