February 21, 2003
Hockey gear arrives in
time for spring season
Montreal Inuit Association
sends donations in exchange for country food
Montreal Inuit
Association volunteers Putulik Qumak, Michael Abraham and Noah Kadjulik show
off donated hockey equipment before sending it to Nunavik.
(PHOTO BY BOB MESHER)
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ODILE
NELSON
Many young Nunavimmiut
hockey players will hit the ice this spring decked out in new jerseys, skates
and helmets thanks to a fresh development in the almost four-year-old
exchange program between Nunavik and Montreal Inuit.
Every year since 1999,
Nunavik communities have sent country food to the Montreal Inuit Association
for use in the organizations monthly community feasts. In return, the
association has sent sealift containers to Nunavik, filled with used furniture,
appliances, toys and clothes donated by Montrealers.
But last October Victor
Mesher, president of the Montreal Inuit Association, met Elizabeth Cundill,
the founder of Game On, a small Montreal-based charity that has been collecting
used hockey equipment for Northern communities since 1999.
In an interview last week,
Mesher said he and Cundill immediately hit it off and decided to combine their
mutual goals. So this year, for the first time, the Montreal Inuit Association
will be sending sports equipment North in exchange for southern-bound muktuk,
ptarmigan, caribou and seal.
"So I told her, Lets
join forces and make it a real effort instead of doing it on a small scale.
We have this new building that Makivik has contributed to our association. We
can store all this hockey equipment there and still have room for much more.
We basically kicked it up a notch," Mesher said.
Five MIA volunteers joined
three from Game On and began canvassing local arenas and sports stores to persuade
them to donate equipment. Three major Montreal stores, Frasers Sports, Play
It Again Sports and The Hockey Company, contributed helmets and skates.
Three weeks ago, the first
batch of 74 equipment packages arrived in Nunavik, Mesher said.
Each package contains an
assortment of chest protectors, jerseys, jock straps, pads, pucks, sticks, skates,
socks and helmets. They have now been distributed between Nunaviks 14
communities.
Korn Pinguapik, recreation
coordinator for Kangirsuks municipal council, said his village received
its share of the equipment about a week ago, just in time for the Ungava Bay
Hockey Tournament, which begins Feb. 21.
But it didnt take
long for word to get around the community that free hockey equipment was available
at Kangirsuks municipal office, Pinguapik said.
"Kids came running
to my office, running and smiling and I just watched them as they got their
equipment," Pinguapik said.
Johnny Akpahatak, the mayor
of Aupaluk, said the equipment complements his villages efforts to improve
its sport activities for youth.
"The equipment arrived
right on time because recreation in our community is being updated and improved
so the equipment arriving at this time is handy," Akpahatak said. "As
recreation improves, so should the hockey season."
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