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November 8, 2002
A global vision
ICCs new president
makes the environment a priority
MIRIAM
HILL
Newly elected
ICC chair Sheila Watt-Cloutier spends about half her time on the road working and the other half
working at her home in Iqaluit.
(PHOTO BY MIRIAM HILL)
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Sheila Watt-Cloutier reaches
into a suitcase beside the sofa in her Iqaluit home and pulls out a red box.
The chair of the Inuit
Circumpolar Conference, an international organization representing about 150,000
Inuit living in the Arctic regions of Canada, Alaska, Greenland and Chukotka,
Russia, has recently returned from a whirlwind trip that saw her visit Washington,
D.C., to receive an award on behalf of ICC Canada and then jet up to Alaska
to speak to the Alaska Federation of Natives.
But its what she
received in Washington that shes anxious to show.
On Oct. 19 WANGO, the World
Association of Non-Governmental Organizations, presented ICC Canada, the chapter
of which Watt-Cloutier has been president since 1995, with its inaugural Global
Award for the Environment.
Watt-Cloutier brought the
award back to her makeshift home office in Iqaluit rather than leaving it in
the Canadian head office in Ottawa not because she wanted to take the credit,
she assures, but because having it in her presence inspires her.
"Because I work with
image, I work with the power and energy of land I really am a spiritual person,"
she says.
She removes the two pieces
of crystal from the box and places it on the table. The base of the piece is
a transparent cupped hand into which an etched world globe sits. It fits so
closely that when the sphere spins it appears to be hovering in the air over
the base.
"It is very symbolic
to me, the symbolism of the hand. And the way that its perfectly engineered,
its like its just floating there," she says, smiling. "Its
like the hands are not grabbing it, theres no mechanism, but yet softly
it sits in ones hands. Thats the nature of the work we do, its
tending to Mother Earth."
Raised on the land until
she was 10, it plays an integral role in Watt-Cloutiers life and being.
A patio off the back of her home overlooks rolling hills and the still unfrozen
Frobisher Bay. As she speaks the sun is starting to set, casting light on the
side of her face.
Watt-Cloutier was elected
ICC chair in August and from then until now, ICCs head office has been
located in Watt-Cloutiers home, supported by the Canadian office in Ottawa.
This interim situation is normal, she says, since it takes between four to six
months to secure funding and set up a head office.
The first executive council
meeting under her command is tentatively scheduled for early January and her
staff is already working on a hands-on agenda for the meeting, which will concern
itself with dissecting the Kuujjuaq Declaration and planning how to make it
a reality.
The priorities for ICC
are the environmental contaminants issue and climate change. Watt-Cloutier says
when tackling such massive issues, you have to go into meetings with a political
strategy and make sure you can propel the issue to another stage.
"The environment is
a priority because its all absolutely connected to who we are culturally,"
she explains. Inuit havent removed themselves from the land either physically
or spiritually.
"We havent disconnected
and we dont have hundreds of years, or even a hundred years of being entrenched
in institutions," she says. "We are connected still to the source.
We are connected to the pulse of the land. It still is very much what drives
us to make changes for us as a people."
Watt-Cloutier says even
though she considers herself a deeply spiritual person, she is also a strategic
politician, planning how and when to get important issues on the table.
A recent trip to the World
Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa, taught her
another political lesson not to take even support from the Canadian government
for granted. With so many world leaders at the event, which was divided into
many venues, Inuit didnt have a chance to raise the concerns and issues
she would have liked.
"It really drained
me completely because we had worked so hard and long with our Canadian government
to set this in motion and put the Arctic on the map," she said.
"I met the (Canadian)
Prime Minister down there at a reception where I didnt have his undivided
attention. What did he think; I was going to talk about how great the cocktails
were? It wasnt about that, it was about the chemical cocktails in the
Arctic sink that I wanted to talk about."
But she says her role is
not one to just scream for attention of the Arctic, but its for everyone,
worldwide.
"Because we are a
people who are on the land and snow every single day we witness the most minute
of changes and we are scientists in our own right and I think they have to pay
heed," she says. "The world has vested interest in keeping us on the
land because we are the guardians."
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