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March 14, 2003
Joshuas journey of
self-discovery
Iqaluit youth crosses
Canada with Katimavik program
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Joshua Kiguktak (second
from right) and his fellow teammates challenged two other groups to build the
best winter shelter. Kiguktaks team placed first.
(PHOTO COURTESY
OF JOSHUA KIGUKTAK)
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CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
Nunatsiaq News
A seven-month journey of
personal growth changed Joshua Kiguktaks life forever.
Kiguktak, of Iqaluit, was
one of 11 young adults across Canada chosen to participate in Katimavik, a national
youth service learning program. His experience was filled with new worlds, new
friendships and new values.
"Ive got more
confidence now," Kiguktak says. "I learned that if you work on something
and just give it a little bit of time and keep doing it, youll succeed."
Katimavik, an Inuktitut
word meaning "meeting place," provides young Canadians between the
ages of 17 and 21 with diversified work experience with non-profit organizations.
In addition to working
35 hours per week on community projects, the group takes part in a learning
program that focuses on developing leadership skills, second language proficiency,
cultural discovery, environmental protection and healthy living.
Before he was accepted
into the program, Kiguktak was a 20-year-old high school dropout killing time
working at a local gas bar, then as a security guard at the legislative assembly
and the hospital.
Since his return from the
Katimavik cross-country tour last April he has applied to Arctic College, where
he wants to get his GED and then go on to fulfill his career goals.
"Personally, [the
experience] really helped me. Ive got more confidence that I can go to
college. I want to become a wildlife officer because I really like the outdoors."
What that experience entailed
was living and working in three different provinces for about two months each.
The group spent time in Shelburn, Nova Scotia; Pinawa, Manitoba; and Prince
George, British Columbia.
Kiguktak volunteered in
a home for elderly and disabled people in Shelburn; painted the inside of a
mall and helped out at a childrens group home in Pinawa; and worked at
an art gallery cleaning and setting up exhibits in Prince George.
Besides the challenges
of work, the group had to learn to live together and function as a team when
it came to household chores, shopping and budgeting the $250 per week they were
given to feed the entire group plus a resident supervisor.
"The first two weeks
was kind of hard," Joshua reveals. "It was hard trying to get along
when nobody knew each other. It was all go, go, go."
Did he like this new pace?
"Yeah ... no, not
really," he finally admits with a laugh.
Never having been off Baffin
Island, his arrival in Shelburn was a stunner.
"I went there in the
fall. Id never seen trees before. [The leaves] were different colours
yellow, green and red," he says excitedly.
Growing up with brothers
prepared him for the time spent working in a group home in Pinawa, he jokes.
They were "tough kids to work with, a real handful," he says.
Wintertime in Prince George
threw Joshua for a loop. He wasnt expecting to encounter temperatures
as low as -30 C. But exposure to the world of art at the gallery where he was
working, made up for the cooler temperatures.
"Id never seen
wood carvings before. That was neat. There were quite a few different styles
of carvings and there was a little story about each one," he says with
fascination.
But best of all was meeting
so many interesting and friendly people with different backgrounds, and the
friendships he carved out among the group of 11 newly motivated souls.
"We still keep in
contact by e-mail, and were planning to see each other again for a week
in Ottawa this November."
The federal government
recently announced it was investing an additional $17 million over two years
in Katimavik.
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