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September 6, 2002
Government focuses on Inuit
Qaujimajatuqangit
Department coordinators,
elders council to help GN implement IQ
Andrew Tagak Sr.,
IQ coordinator for the department of health and social services.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN
MURPHY)
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SARA
ARNATSIAQ
Since the inception of
the Government of Nunavut, three Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit coordinator positions
have been in place to represent three key government departments.
Andrew Tagak Sr. is the
Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit coordinator for the department of health and social
services. He started May 1.
When policies or procedures
are introduced, Tagak Sr. reviews them to make sure they are culturally sound
and practical. He makes recommendations for changes to ensure the department
operates in a manner suited to Inuit culture and traditions.
For instance, when unilingual
elders have to travel to Ottawa for medical treatment, they should be given
an escort, Tagak Sr. says.
Anthony Saez is a senior
policy analyst for the department of culture, language elders and youth. Monitoring
IQ is one of his many jobs. The IQ position in the department of sustainable
development is vacant because Joanna Quassa was recently promoted.
The three coordinators
have met on occasion to discuss progress and areas that need improvement.
It is Tagak Sr.s
hope that every government department will have an IQ coordinator. He believes
that once this happens, the government will be able to provide programs that
are more relevant to Inuit and benefit Inuit more effectively.
This fall, CLEY will create
an elders council an IQ mechanism for the legislative assembly. The council
is meant to perform the same function for MLAs that Tagak Sr. performs for employees
in the department of health and social services.
Exactly how people will
become members of the elders council and what the council will look like is
being finalized now. An announcement will be made in the legislature in October,
after cabinet has approved it.
Tagak Sr. thinks it would
be a good idea for it to work the same way as the legislative assembly
for elders to represent each community in Nunavut, and be appointed to different
departments according to their knowledge in a particular subject.
He also said that groups
such as the Niutaq Cultural Institute and Inuit Cultural Institute might be
able to contribute to government and to the elders council in
ways that individuals might not be able to.
Tagak Sr. believes Nunavut
needs an elders council because it is sometimes difficult to implement IQ. The
Bathurst Mandate is not always followed.
The elders council will
allow the GN to combine oral tradition with the modern way of documentation.
He said that if IQ is going
to be implemented properly, then we need elders to provide the guidance.
He used the example of
a white man who has never seen a polar bear or fired a rifle saying, "First
of all, you need to be taught how dangerous the bear is, then you need to know
how to fire a rifle safely without endangering yourself. Then with that guidance,
you have to judge for yourself whether or not youre really in danger."
He said barbecues and picnics
for GN employees, where someone plays the drum to celebrate IQ day, are not
the way to implement IQ. However, he said the GNs methods should improve
over time.
Once inaccuracies in government
are being pointed out and the elders council is running, he said, the relationship
between the government and ordinary people should improve.
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