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September 20, 2002
Trio honoured for daring
rescues
Commissioner's awards
recognize acts of bravery
MIRIAM
HILL
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Paul Landry, left,
and Jayco Audlakiak, right, were presented with commissioner's awards of bravery
by Peter Irniq this week in Iqaluit.
(PHOTO BY MIRIAM
HILL)
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Paul Landry, Peter Gladden
and Jayco Audlakiak received commissioner's awards for bravery at the highest
level this week from Nunavut Commissioner Peter Irniq.
Audlakiak, 13, was nominated
for the award by his father after he saved his younger cousin Mosha Moesie Audlakiak
from drowning in Qikiqtarjuaq in the summer of 1999.
The cousins were walking
with some friends one afternoon when Mosha slipped and fell into the water.
While the others didn't know what to do, Jayco reached in and tried to pull
his cousin to safety.
"Three times he went
under the water," the soft-spoken Jayco said, without making eye contact.
"His mouth was blue. He drank a lot of the water."
Jayco said he would show
the certificate he received to his family and friends, but added his cousin
already thanked him very much for saving his life.
Paul Landry of Iqaluit
was nominated for an incident that occurred at the end of July 2001, when he
was leading a trip in Auyuittuq Park, outside of Pangnirtung.
The water was high, he
said, and crossing the rivers was a challenge. The group set up camp near a
glacier to wait for the water to recede. Landry was cooking breakfast at about
5 a.m. when he spotted members of another group attempting to cross the nearby
river.
"I watched as one
by one they were swept away," he said quietly.
Three out of five members
of the group were clustered together in the water several metres from shore
in Glacier Lake, named for the glacier that keeps its waters frigid.
One person had not attempted
to cross and one man, Michael Graves, was on his own in the lake about twice
as far out as the others.
Landry went to his own
group and asked Peter Gladden, the strongest of the bunch, if he would help
him attempt a rescue.
Gladden, a U.S. citizen,
agreed and he and Landry swam out to the cluster of three people and dragged
them back to shore.
Graves was not responding
to shouts from the shore, so the two agreed to go back in on the condition that
if either one felt they weren't going to make it, they would turn back.
"[Graves] was alive, but I didn't know it at the time," Landry said,
describing how he and Gladden dragged his body to shore. "Both Peter and
I couldn't stand up. We had to crawl out of the water."
As the two moved their
limbs to try to get warm, they saw bubbles forming at Graves' mouth. They knew
then he was alive. With the help of members of both groups, park officials and
his young Inuit assistant-in-training, Juta, Landry lead everyone to safety.
Landry didn't speak of the incident publicly until this week because he said
he didn't feel comfortable being praised for his actions.
"I realized I had
gone close to the edge," he said. "I have children. And I didn't feel
comfortable with the decision I made to ask someone else to help me."
In December, Landry will
receive the Governor General's award for bravery in Ottawa.
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