Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., more “Qaggiq”

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., more “Qaggiq”

It was finally time for the Qaggiq to celebrate of the sun’s return to Igloolik, an event postponed in January 1997 for several days due to the death of a young man who overdosed on drugs.

A boy looks at the qulliit lit at 1997's Return of the Sun ceremony in Igloolik. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A boy looks at the qulliit lit at 1997’s Return of the Sun ceremony in Igloolik. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

When the Qaggiq took place, nearly everyone in the community of about 1,200 gathered in the local gym — not the huge igloo of former times — to welcome back the sun with dancing, singing and Inuit games which continued for hours.

Rosie Iqallijuq, 91, lights the qulliq at the Return of the Sun ceremony in Igloolik in 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Rosie Iqallijuq, 91, lights the qulliq at the Return of the Sun ceremony in Igloolik in 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

The oldest resident of Igloolik, then 91-year old Rosie Iqallijuq, tended the wick of a soapstone lamp, the qulliq, set in the middle of a circle of similar lamps. From this central flame, a young girl relit the other qulliit lamps, celebrating the rebirth of light and hope.

However, camera flashes interfered with the proceedings: while the elders’ feast at the Igloolik Research Centre I attended earlier  in the week was calm, this was event is almost a media brawl. Of course, I was also trying to get good shots.

Television cameras almost completely obscured the lighting of the qulliit: Those present would have to check later in the local newspaper or watch television to see what took place.

“With brighter days being back, we hope the light will be brighter in the future,” Lazarus Arreak of the Baffin Regional Inuit Association told the gathering.

The suicide statistics in the mid-1990s were bleak enough (although even 15 years later, these do not improve): There were an average of 22 suicides a year in the eastern Arctic, which then had a population of about 24,000. Most were young Inuit men aged 14 to 24. Firearms and hanging were the most common methods. Drugs, alcohol and substance abuse were often involved.

“We hope that alcohol and drugs will continue to do no more damage to our communities,” said Arreak, who would go on to suffer problems of his own — he resigned from his position in 1998 —  and in 2000 pleads guilty to one count of sexual assault, while two other charges against him involving the sexual molestation of underage girls were dropped.

Some months before my visit to Igloolik in 1997, two men in their 20s had hanged themselves after escaping police custody, in a suicide pact that shocked the community.

A Nunatsiaq News clipping about two men who die in police custody in Igloolik in 1996.

A Nunatsiaq News clipping about two men who die in police custody in Igloolik in 1996.

While in Igloolik, I pieced together their story: the two had been arrested and were being held in conjunction with a series of break-ins and thefts, including the theft of more than $20,000 from the community’s co-operative store. After plugging up the small jail’s toilet, they convinced a guard to let them out to use the RCMP office facilities.

They ran off, taking guns and ammunition with them, to make a desperate last stand. But the bullets didn’t match their guns. So, they killed themselves instead.

People in Igloolik told me that, for a long time, the presence of older Inuit provided a bulwark against change. Back in 1820, explorer William Parry noted that Inuit in this region lived together in harmony. Honesty, openness and co-operation, he noted, were the hallmarks of their small-scale society.

But social peace was no longer the rule: Things were worse than before, I was told, because of the ever-increasing number of young people more influenced by television and videos than traditional values.

For years, Igloolik banned television from the community, until 1983 when Inuktitut-language broadcasts became available. In 1997, television from around North America was available on cable and local stores carried recent video releases.

At the same time, discipline among students was becoming difficult to maintain, and several teachers had decided to leave the community or taken sick leave, one as the result of a young student’s assault.

Students play outside school in Igloolik. (PHOTO/WIKIPEDIA)

Students play outside school in Igloolik. (PHOTO/WIKIPEDIA)

“Let’s live in Igloolik in harmony,” read a student’s sad plea on the elementary school bulletin board. “Little children behave, grown-ups be sober. He who is drunk might just shoot children, so don’t drink.”

“Traditional values are very important to us,” said Louis Tapardjuk (later an MLA and minister in the Nunavut government), who has spearheaded the recording oral histories in Igloolik for the Inuullarit Society’s oral history project.

“Once we start loosing that, you lose your culture completely. We had our way of doing things. From that, we learn how to cope with life.”

Ataguttaaluk, who died in 1948 at 75, was a woman who personified these traditional Inuit values for the residents of Igloolik.

When she and her family were caught out on the land in a fierce storm, she survived by eating the frozen flesh of her husband and children after they died. Her determination to survive and her honesty about the experience made Ataguttaaluk a local hero: Igloolik’s school bears her name today.

But material survival was no longer an issue, and the community, despite its reputation as the tradition-bearer of Inuit ways, appeared to be in the middle of a battle with new problems.

Violence related to alcohol consumption was high, according to RCMP officers at the Igloolik detachment. Petty theft and other property offences was also on the increase and drug use had increased, they said.

“Nunavut will help,” I heard from one resident, expressing a commonly-held hope about the creation of the new territory in 1999.

But in January 1997, April 1, 1999 seemed far away to me while I struggled with Igloolik’s frigid temperatures, the darkness, and I felt haunted by the sight of huge, dog-sized ravens flying around the cemetery. I found out garbage in the new dump nearby that nourished the ravens.

I was homesick and my gums became inflamed. My stomach hurt. I got bad frostbite on my nose after heading out over the sea ice in minus 60 C windchills. My nose turned solid white (and although the flesh thawed out without obvious damage, it would always bother me afterwards.)

A sailboat, frozen in the sea ice outside Igloolik, is home to two sailors from France during the winter of 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A sailboat, frozen in the sea ice outside Igloolik, is home to two sailors from France during the winter of 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

My goal on that frigid trip across the sea ice, along with some CBC television reporters: to interview a French couple who was living on their tiny yacht frozen in the ice about 20 minutes from Igloolik.

There they ate lukewarm meals in their cold galley. The couple’s on-board experiences and menus become fodder for a humorous piece on life in the cold for CBC’s Basic Black, then a popular national radio show.

But I didn’t feel as if life was funny while in I was in Igloolik. I was annoyed that my mastery of Inuktitut wasn’t good enough yet for me to interview unilingual elders: I was limited to only polite exchanges in Inuktitut and listening to conversations.

And I was alarmed by the resident non-Inuit I meet in the community. Why were they there? They all complained of rising social problems in Igloolik and about the high levels of violence and despair in the community. Most appeared to be just hanging on, until they could leave.

Or, if they couldn’t or didn’t want to leave, they apparently had made a pact to accept the situation. At the time, it made me feel that they were part of the community’s problems, collaborating through their inaction, and  keeping secrets, too.

There was a woman in her 60s, whom I met — Georgia, who ended up in Igloolik and wrote a book in 1982 called An Arctic Diary about her experiences over the course of a year in Igloolik and Repulse Bay.

This image of Georgia is from the book she wrote of her life in the North.

This image of Georgia is from the eponymous book that she wrote about her life in the North.

In 1997, Georgia lived in a tiny house by the water, which, when I visited, was covered in ice and snow. In the summer, however, she had a “bone garden” in front of her house and I could see some whale bones sticking out through the snow. Inside her house, where boiling water steamed up from the stove, there was a huge polar bear hide tacked on to a wall.

Georgia suggested off-hand that I could stay in her house some day when she was out of Igloolik. But I was terrified by her generous offer and this otherwise pleasant encounter over tea — and I decided then that, no matter what would happen later on in my life,  I would not end up alone in a dark, cold community again in January, far from my family.

Read more from the Like an iceberg’s “Qaggiq,” a four-part series, May 7.

Miss the first part of “Qaggiq”? Find it here.

Earlier instalments can be found here:

Like an iceberg: on being a journalist in the Arctic

Like an iceberg, 1991…cont.

Like an iceberg, 1991…more

Like an iceberg, 1992, “Shots in the dark” 

Like an iceberg, 1992, “Sad stories”

Like an iceberg, 1993, “Learning the language of the snows”

Like an iceberg, 1993 cont., “Spring”

Like an iceberg, 1993 cont., “Chesterfield Inlet”

Like an iceberg, 1993 cont., more “Chesterfield Inlet”

Like an iceberg, 1994: “Seals and more”

Like an iceberg, 1994, cont., “No news is good news”

Like an iceberg, 1994 cont., more “No news is good news”

Like an iceberg, 1994 cont., “A place with four names”

Like an iceberg, 1995, “More sad stories”

Like an iceberg, 1995 cont., “No place like Nome”

Like an iceberg, 1995 cont., “Greenland”

Like an iceberg, 1995, cont. “Secrets”

Like an iceberg, 1996, “Hard Lessons”

Like an iceberg, 1996 cont., “Working together”

Like an iceberg, 1996 cont., “At the edge of the world”

Like an iceberg, 1996, more “At the edge of the world”

Like an iceberg, 1996, cont, “Choices”

Like an iceberg, 1997, “Qaqqiq” 

 

 

Like an iceberg, 1996 cont., “Choices”

Like an iceberg, 1996 cont., “Choices”

The old bar in the Nunavik community of Kuujjuaq was an unnerving place. I went there one evening in the early 1990s for a beer. The bar was filled with smoke and people, maybe 150 men and women or more, a good percentage of the town’s adult population.

I stood at the bar, taking in the scene. A dartboard was on one wall, and some players were throwing darts from across the room, right over the heads of drinkers. I was glad not to be sitting down.

But for two weeks during the month of September in 1996, no more booze was flowing into Kuujjuaq. It looked as if Kuujjuaq could become a dry community. Mayor Johnny Adams had decided to do something about excessive drinking in his community.

The Ikkaqivik Bar, Kuujjuaq. (PHOTO/ LAVAL FORTIN)

The Ikkaqivvik Bar, Kuujjuaq. (PHOTO/ LAVAL FORTIN)

He asked the Ikkaqivvik Bar to close down and requested that the Fort Chimo Co-op store no longer sell beer. The new Ikkaqivvik Bar, built in 1994, was open Monday through Friday evening, selling about 30 cases of beer at the bar every night. The co-op store sold more than 150 cases of beer every Wednesday and Friday.

“It was a difficult decision, but we’ve been facing difficult times,” Adams said. “Of the 11 burials we’ve seen the beginning of 1996, eight were somehow caused by too much alcohol.”

I was not in Kuujjuaq when the ban was put into place, so I called Adams on the telephone. I was still feeling bad then about my story on Kuujjuaq’s school. No matter what repercussions I suffered, I knew what I wrote upset him: the failure of education in Kuujjuaq was seen as his failure too.

I’d spoken with Adams before, about what it was like to be a journalist here. All I could do was to promise him to deliver the good and the bad about Kuujjuaq in what I said or wrote.

In 1996, Kuujjuaq and Kuujjuaraapik were the only two communities in northern Quebec that have bars or alcohol sales. Adams said he felt he had to take official action before anyone else died in Kuujjuaq.

The week before his decision in September, a young, intoxicated woman died when she lost control of her all-terrain vehicle and rammed into a tractor-trailer. Her death left three young children motherless. Since August, there had also been three other deaths in Kuujjuaq, all involving excessive alcohol consumption.

Another man, Jaypeetee Akpalialuk, the former mayor of Pangnirtung, who had grand plans of selling seal pelts to Japan, drowned in a few inches of water under a bridge. Another man died by suicide. A third man died of a gunshot wound received during a drunken dispute that turned violent.

A street in Kuujuaq, where voters in decide in 1996 to keep the bar open — and in 2011 to start selling beer again. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A street in Kuujuaq, where voters in decide in 1996 to keep their bar open. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

In October, 1996, Kuujjuaq residents voted in a municipal referendum on whether to continue alcohol sales in the community.

Registered voters could answer “yes” or “no” to two questions: “Do you agree that the Ikkaqivvik Bar should continue to sell alcohol?” and “Do you agree that the Fort Chimo Co-op continue to sell beer?”

Students at Jaanimmarik School also held a referendum of their own and voted overwhelmingly to keep the bar closed and to sell no more beer through the co-op. The women’s shelter director said on the community radio’s call-in show that fewer women had come in for assistance since the ban was imposed. And the Kativik Regional Police Force had received only half their normal volume of calls.

But the workers at the Ikkaqivvik Bar said their establishment was being unfairly singled out as the cause of the community’s problems.

“It’s like people with guns — one person goes off half-cocked and everyone gets blamed,” said a bar employee.

With the closure of the bar, 15 people were out of work. But during the two-week-long ban, Kuujjuaq was a changed community, a tranquil place, with no all-terrain vehicles speeding around the streets.

As the season’s first snowflakes came down, people stayed at home, instead of heading out for a drink at the bar, and they weren’t drinking at home either, because no booze was available in town.

“It was the quietest two weeks we just had. It was great,” said the owner of the local motor vehicle sales and repair shop.

But Kuujjuaq’s period of calm ended when the people decided to bring booze back into the community — but not too much of it. Voters came out 70 per cent in favour of keeping the local bar’s doors open. Eighty-four per cent of those who vote also wanted the Fort Chimo Co-op to stop selling beer.

No one was surprised by the decision to re-open the bar. Bar revenues supported the local hotel, provided jobs and underwrote community recreation activities. Still, many had mixed feeling about the results. They weren’t sure whether cutting out retail beer sales would solve the alcohol abuse problem, although they said children might suffer less if drinking goes on outside of the home.

In 2013 beer and wine can be purchased at the Kuujjuaq co-op store. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A second referendum decides in 2011 that retail alcohol sales can take place in Kuujjuaq, and in 2013 beer and wine can be purchased at the Kuujjuaq co-op store. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

The municipal council also passed a by-law limiting orders for alcohol flown up from the South to four cases of beer a month and two litres of spirits or four litres of wine.

These new limits on ordering in booze were designed to cut off supplies to bootleggers because all requests for alcohol will have to go through the council.

The referendum would not be a cure-all, Adams said. He wasn’t even sure that all alcohol-related deaths and family violence would end.

“But I think there will see some reduction, although we’ll only see in a few months, whether it’s had an impact,” Adams said.

He told me that he was going out on the land for the weekend to clear his thoughts. Like him, though, I was feeling, at that moment, hopeful for Kuujjuaq, a community that seemed to want to get better.

In 2011 residents voted in another referendum to re-instate retail beer sales, along with wine sales, at the local co-op store, which again starts selling alcohol in 2013.

Police later maintained that crime — high enough still — had not risen.

The next instalment of “Like an iceberg” goes live May 5.

Did you miss earlier blog entries of “Like an iceberg”? You can read them here:

Like an iceberg: on being a journalist in the Arctic

Like an iceberg, 1991…cont.

Like an iceberg, 1991…more

Like an iceberg, 1992, “Shots in the dark” 

Like an iceberg, 1992, “Sad stories”

Like an iceberg, 1993, “Learning the language of the snows”

Like an iceberg, 1993 cont., “Spring”

Like an iceberg, 1993 cont., “Chesterfield Inlet”

Like an iceberg, 1993 cont., more “Chesterfield Inlet”

Like an iceberg, 1994: “Seals and more”

Like an iceberg, 1994, cont., “No news is good news”

Like an iceberg, 1994 cont., more “No news is good news”

Like an iceberg, 1994 cont., “A place with four names”

Like an iceberg, 1995, “More sad stories”

Like an iceberg, 1995 cont., “No place like Nome”

Like an iceberg, 1995 cont., “Greenland”

Like an iceberg, 1995, cont. “Secrets”

Like an iceberg, 1996, “Hard Lessons”

Like an iceberg, 1996 cont., “Working together”

Like an iceberg, 1996 cont., “At the edge of the world”

Like an iceberg, 1996, more “At the edge of the world”

Like an iceberg, 1996, “Who speaks for Inuit”

 

A piece of ice rots in the spring sun near the Koksoak River. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A piece of ice rots in the spring sun near the Koksoak river. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)