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An interview-David Serkoak_img

An interview with David Serkoak

By Article

The Ahiarmiut were relocated over and over again. In 1949 the Government of Canada bulldozed their camp at Ennadai Lake, southwest Nunavut, and began a devastating decade-long relocation process. David Serkoak lived through the relocations as a child. The retired teacher and principal in Nunavut now lives in Ottawa. Last January, in Arviat, the 21 remaining Ahiarmiut relocation survivors finally heard the Canadian government apologize.

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A drawing of an Inuit hunter paddling a kayak near the edge of the ice, with a seal on the kayak and a vibrant sunset in the background. Another figure in a kayak can be seen in the distance.

Adrift

By Article

THE ATLANTIC OCEAN BORDERS the Labrador coastline from the northern end of the Big Land, where it meets Davis Strait to the southern end, which runs into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Storms have shaped the landscape as well as the People living on the coast. Conditions all along the coastline are harsh, but the northern climes are the hardest areas for people to adapt to.

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Inuit Child First Initiative – Atuagaq: A Guide for Families Navigating the Inuit Child First Initiative

By ICFI, Publications

The Inuit Child First Initiative ensures Inuit children have access to the essential health, social and educational products, services and supports they need, when they need them.
Inuit CFI recognizes intergenerational trauma from the legacy of colonization and all requests are reviewed with a substantive equality lens.

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Inuit Business Survey

By Announcements

We want to hear from owners, general managers and senior managers of Inuit-owned businesses and self-employed Inuit. The information collected will help Inuit organizations better support Inuit businesses to recover, reopen, and thrive through COVID-19 and after the pandemic.

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