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December 20, 2002
Ending the abuse: GN mounts
anti-violence campaign
Three-poster series
promoting prevention of violence against women unveiled in Iqaluit
Madeleine Qumuatuq,
president of the Nunavut Status of Women Council, stands with one the posters
unveiled this week promoting the prevention of violence against women.
(PHOTO BY MIRIAM HILL)
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MIRIAM HILL
Ed Picco, the minister
of health and social services, remembers a time when he was working as an adult
educator and a woman once came to his class with two black eyes.
She said she fell while
loading a qamutik. Picco said he knew that wasnt true she was pushed.
"Its unacceptable
for a woman to walk around with a black eye," Picco said, saying its even
more unacceptable for those around her to pretend they dont notice.
Picco was speaking at the
unveiling of a new three-poster series promoting the prevention of violence
against women and children. Set against the backdrop of four Christmas trees
decorated by school children in the lobby of the legislative assembly building
in Iqaluit, the posters are hard-hitting.
One shows a child with
bed covers pulled up to his chin and a look of terror on his face, while in
the background the shape of an adult can be seen closing the bedroom door.
Another shows a distraught
woman speaking to two RCMP officers and a third, perhaps the most powerful,
presents a close-up image of a woman with a sore-looking black eye staring back
at the viewer while she hugs her son close to her chest.
"Violence is not our
way break the silence," states one poster. "Abuse is wrong
in any language. Love your family," reads another. The posters are a product
of a collaboration between the territorial departments of Culture, Language,
Elders and Youth; Health and Social Services; Education; and Justice.
Picco stressed that family
violence is an issue in the territory every day and that the only way for these
posters to be successful is if people work in unison at the local level.
"Today in Iqaluit
you can go to the womens shelter and see bruises, black eyes, broken jaws,"
and people who need to be medevaced to the South, Picco said. "Lets
not ignore it."
His own department, he
admitted, needs to do more to help the fight against family violence. Since
1989, he said, prevention of family violence programming has only received a
10 per cent increase in funding and that came last year.
Jack Anawak, Culture, Language,
Elders and Youth minister, is also the minister responsible for the Nunavut
Status of Women Council. He said that far too often we hear about victims of
abuse and quietly sit back and think it should not be happening.
"Abusers need to be
educated and the abused need to be encouraged," Anawak said. "We must
show our children that there are those of us who condemn spousal abuse publicly
and forcefully. Without the example of positive action, the cycle of violence
will not be broken."
Madeleine Qumuatuq, the
president of the Nunavut Status of Women Council, said the issue of family violence
is one her organization is always working on. Its always in the forefront,
she said, because it wounds families, children and overall community development.
The posters will be distributed
to every community in Nunavut for the beginning of 2003, and will have local
contact information printed on the bottom.
"This is Christmas
coming up," Picco reminded the assembled crowd. "The intake at womens
shelters is one of the highest of the year around the territory."
"Christmas can be
a happy time," he said. "It can also be a very sad time for some,"
and lets not forget that.
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