February 21, 2003
Solace from soapstone
Hands that once killed,
now carve
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Six inmates in the carving program at Fenbrook
Institution donated their works to a charity auction to raise money for the
Illitiit Society of Nunavut.
(PHOTOS COURTESY OF FEHELEY FINE ARTS)
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MIRIAM
HILL
Nunatsiaq News
A dark soapstone candleholder
carved as a staring Inuk face peers out from the cover of the catalogue produced
by Waddingtons Auctioneers and Appraisers.
The piece, inset with caribou
antler teeth, was carved by Joanasie Korgak, a man with a lot of time on his
hands these days.
But the hands of this 29-year-old
Iqaluit man were also used to inflict pain and suffering on people in his community.
In 1997, Korgak was sentenced to life imprisonment for the second-degree murder
of his 17-year-old cousin.
Now he and five other carvers
at Fenbrook Institution, a medium-security prison in Gravenhurst, Ontario, about
90 minutes north of Toronto, are trying to give back to their communities and
help those in need.
Over the past five months,
six carvers in the program have created a 25-piece collection to be auctioned
off with all proceeds going to the Illitiit Society of Nunavut. A number of
private collectors are also donating carvings to be sold. Inside Out, Giving
Back to the Community, a charity art auction, will take place March 2, with
a preview at Torontos Feheley Fine Arts Feb. 20 to 22.
Joanasie
Korgak's carving will be auctioned March 2.
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There are 34 Inuit inmates
at Fenbrook, which is the designated institution for federal offenders from
the eastern Arctic, although its about 2,300 kilometres from the North.
And there are 15 participants in the carving program, one of Fenbrooks
reintegration skills initiatives.
"In corrections we
have programs to help offenders use their time wisely, be more productive in
their leisure time as well as to have some skills for gainful employment upon
release," said Annette Allen, the assistant warden management services
at Fenbrook.
"With the Inuit population
carving, the initiative had a double advantage. Its making good use of
leisure time and its also an employment skill upon release."
The carvings produced in
the program are usually purchased by Arctic Co-operatives Ltd., which markets
and sells the pieces. ACL takes a cut of the sale price, as does the carving
program. The remaining money is either sent to the offenders family or
put in a savings account for when the offender is released. The proceeds from
the auction, however, are going entirely to the Illitiit Society.
"When we were initiating
this activity we wanted to ensure the proceeds did go back to the Nunavut territory
and to some charitable organization there," Allen said.
Josh Teemotee, executive
director of the Illitiit Society, said being the benefactor of such a sale is
a real shot in the arm for the umbrella organization, which helps out smaller
groups, such as Iqaluits Oqota Emergency shelter for the homeless. The
society is working on starting Nunavuts first United Way.
"I think its
great, especially since we get some federal inmates staying at our shelter sometimes,"
Teemotee said.
The shelter also has a
"bail room" where people who have become homeless after being charged
with an offence can stay.
The Illitiit Society received
$10,000 last year from Comart, a southern organization and, Teemotee said, organizers
of this auction are suggesting the event could bring in up to $20,000 of much-needed
money.
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