Like an iceberg, 1999 cont., more on “the Avalanche”

Like an iceberg, 1999 cont., more on “the Avalanche”

In May 1999, I was back in the Nunavik community of Kangiqsualujjuaq — this time to cover a three-week-long coroner’s inquest into the avalanche that  took place there on Jan. 1.

The inquest, which took place in a small hall, the only community space left after the avalanche destroyed the school gym, ran all day long before a judge, lawyers representing some of parties, community members and me, the only journalist present.

Maggie Emudluk, mayor of Kangiqsualujjuaq, with coroner Jacques Bérubé (PHOTO BY JANGE GEORGE)

Maggie Emudluk, mayor of Kangiqsualujjuaq, with coroner Jacques Bérubé at the May, 1999 inquest. (PHOTO BY JANGE GEORGE)

At night, after the daily inquest proceedings wind down, while writing my articles about what people said, I felt sad.

The weekends — two of them —  were long, and, while the weather is perfect for heading out on the land and I squeezed in a snowmobile  ride or two with a friend, I had to catch up on my work while the sun is shining.

One evening, when I watch a film made about Maori in New Zealand, called “Once Were Warriors,” about the devastation suffered by indigenous people on the other side of the world, I couldn’t stop sobbing in the apartment of a teacher that I had rented for the duration of the inquest.

A break during the coroner's inquest in Kangiqsualujjuaq held in May 1999. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A break during the coroner’s inquest in Kangiqsualujjuaq held in May 1999. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

I was immersed in human tragedy, while my editors at the Nunatsiaq News in Iqaluit were still buoyed from the celebrations around the creation of Nunavut on April 1, 1999, which I ended up covering from Ottawa.

Even so, hearing the testimonies at the inquest left me uplifted by the bravery of those who survived or who helped others to survive.

That’s because after the Jan. 1 avalanche, panic quickly gave way to action. At the coroner’s inquest, we learned that the electrical system was still functioning, and those who weren’t buried in snow stood in a brightly lit space that was suddenly a place of horror instead of a party.

Two of Sophie Keelan’s daughters were buried when the avalanche hit the gym at 1:40 a.m. Snow smashed her seven-year-old daughter on to the floor of the gym where she lay trapped until an elder dug her out. Her daughter was weak when she finally emerged, wet and cold, from the snow.

As Keelan rushed back home from the gym with the chilled young girl on her snowmobile, she tried to blow warm air towards her small face. After her daughter was safe and warm at home, Keelan returned to the gym to help.

There, she would end up performing cardio-pulmonary resuscitation on other avalanche victims, some of whom were not as lucky as her daughter.

“I worked for 19 and a half hours,” she told the inquest. “All night, all day.”

Here you can see how close the school (far right) was located to the avalanche-prone slope in Kangiqsualujjuaq. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Here you can see how close the school (far right) was located to the avalanche-prone slope in Kangiqsualujjuaq. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

After freeing herself from the snow, Christina Baron began to dig with her hands to help get others out, but the powdery stuff quickly congealed into a concrete-hard layer. She couldn’t find a shovel, so she grabbed a piece of wood and started digging. Baron had last seen her older daughter as she was walking across the gym to take her baby home.

“She started walking towards the door, and just as they went away from where I was sitting, the avalanche occurred,” Baron said.

The two were buried in snow. Before they were rescued, the baby had died in the amautik hood. Baron later took her granddaughter back to her house, away from the chaotic gym, in a truck.

“Holding that dead baby was very hard for me,” she said.

Ken Jararuse was under the snow for about 30 minutes. A piece of wood behind some climbing bars in the gym saved his life, because it kept snow from smothering him. When Jararuse was finally released from the snow, he tried to make sense of what he saw around him.

“It was scary,” Jararuse said. “It was terrible. We didn’t know what to do. It was very cold. I wasn’t dressed for the situation. I was dressed for a New Year’s Eve party.”

The gymnasium at Satuumavik School in Kangiqsualujjuaq has already been torn down three months after the avalanche. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

The gymnasium at Satuumavik School in Kangiqsualujjuaq has already been torn down three months after the avalanche. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

He learned that his niece had been killed by the force of the snow-slide. Although he was weak and could barely lift his arms, Jararuse later pitched in by digging behind the school, to look for those who were still buried there.

“Anybody and everybody who was able to help did,” he said.

When the avalanche buried Adamie Annanack in the snow, shortly after he stepped into the gym that night, he could feel people walking on top on him. He couldn’t see or move, but he could hear noises.

“Some of the people under the snow never stopped yelling,” Annanack said at the inquest.

As soon as he was rescued, by someone who his hand sticking up toward the surface, he began to dig, too.

“Everyone was helping each other,” he said.

Many buildings in the avalanche zone in Kangiqsualujjuaq, SEEN HERE IN MAY, 1999, would be removed. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Many buildings in the avalanche zone in Kangiqsualujjuaq, seen here in May 1999, would be removed. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

For many, just surviving the avalanche took all their force. David Emudluk was outside the back of the school, helping a friend repair a snowmobile when the avalanche hit. He was thrown through a window of the school where he ended up half buried in snow and pinned under a snowmobile.

Emudluk was also injured, but he managed somehow to crawl out and over the snow that filled the classroom. Unable to walk due to an ankle wound, he dragged himself down the corridor, where finally he found help.

For three hours after avalanche half buried her in snow, Harriet Etok had no idea whether or not all her children were safe. At around 4:30 a.m. she finally learned that searchers had located her last missing child, daughter Betty, four.

Betty was dead. She had been instantly killed when the avalanche rammed a metal door into her small body. Earlier that evening, as she stood at the back entrance of the school’s gym to have a smoke, Harriet had heard the avalanche coming down the slope.

“I heard a big noise and I didn’t know what it was. I heard Louisa [next to her] say, “What’s that?”, and once I had heard her say it, when I was still outside, I saw a big cloud of snow coming down. It didn’t take a second to come to us,” Harriet told the inquest.

The next thing Harriet knew, she was almost buried in snow. She immediately began digging with her free hands, to clear snow around herself and the others beside her who were completely covered.

After a man freed Harriet, her thoughts immediately turned to her children who had been in the gym. She was scared when she saw that the gym was still full of snow. There were few children in sight.

“All my children are lost!” she cried.

Harriet and her sister began to look near the spot where they had last seen their children, stopping to help dig out other buried youngsters. At one point, Harriet, still dressed in wet and frozen pants, ran home to get her husband, so that he could go back to the gym with a shovel and help dig.

It took them three hours to learn the whereabouts of their four children who had been at the gym. Betty was the last to be found.

The inquest went on forever, story after story. I get to know the inquest team and celebrate the end of the inquest with them over a supper one evening — a perk after cooking for myself.

The new school in Kangiqsualujjaq is open by May, 1999. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

The new school in Kangiqsualujjaq is open by May, 1999. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Over the coming year, I followed the rebuilding of Kangiqsualujjuaq: the construction of its new school, the moving of houses away from the avalanche zone and finally the demolition of the ravaged school. Improved emergency services are put into place, according to the inquest’s recommendations.

If a similar disaster happens, people in Nunavik might be better prepared to cope— but would I?

That terrible avalanche and following inquest turned out to be only one of many hard stories which I would cover in the future, including the inquest into the suicide of Julian Tologanak, who leapt out of a plane, the crash of First Air flight 6560 in Resolute Bay, the  fire in minus 50 C temperatures which destroyed the White Row housing in Iqaluit, the shoot-out and death of Nunavik cop Steve Déry, and a triple murder in Kimmirut on Easter Sunday in 2013.

Everything I heard and felt always stayed with me, but I refused on many occasions to share information or photos with other journalists who called me at the office when some catastrophe unfolds   — why should I let them know what I learned from being in the North and suffering along with so many victims?

Or why should I help them for free when the Nunatsiaq News invested in the North, supported me and paid my salary?

The addition to Satuumavik School — the only part left undamaged by the avalanche — is an apartment complex in 2007. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

The addition to Satuumavik School — the only part left undamaged by the avalanche — is an apartment complex in 2007. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Like an iceberg continues May 28.

You can read earlier instalments 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, “Qaggiq”

Like an iceberg, 1997, more “Qaggiq”

Like an iceberg, 1997, “Qaggiq” cont.

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., “Qaggiq and hockey”

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., “Brain surgery in POV”

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont.: “Masks on an island”

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., “Abusers on the pulpit”

Like an iceberg, 1998, “Bearing gifts”

Like an iceberg, 1998 cont., “At the top of the world”

Like an iceberg, 1998 cont., “A bad week” 

Like an iceberg, 1998 cont.: more from “A bad week”

Like an iceberg, 1998 cont., “Memories”

Like an iceberg, 1999, “The avalanche”

Like an iceberg, 1999 cont., “An exorcism, followed by a penis cutting”

Like an iceberg, 1998 cont., “At the top of the world”

Like an iceberg, 1998 cont., “At the top of the world” 

White stones spell out Resolute Bay in English and Inuktitut. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

White stones spell out the name of  Resolute in English and Inuktitut. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Resolute Bay, Nunavut,  the staging point for travel to the High Arctic islands, was by far the bleakest place that I ever visited in the Canadian Arctic. Covered with small round stones, the land was devoid of vegetation.

Qausuittuq: place of gravel — that’s what Inuit relocated here in the 1950s in an effort to bolster Canadian sovereignty called the place. The airport was surrounded with barracks dating from the Cold War era of the 1950s when Resolute was a thriving military base. But, since the bar closed there in the early 1980s, it’s never been the same, I was told.

Military buildings are still standing in Resolute Bay, but growing more dilapidated with the years. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Military buildings are still standing in Resolute Bay, but growing more dilapidated with the years. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

But, for three years in a row, starting in the summer of 1998, I was still happy to arrive in Resolute. I was determined to get to know the High Arctic after I saw a television documentary on Ellesmere Island and spent months during the winter setting up a trip there for July.

Overwhelmed by writing stories that made me wince, I arrived in a place with few people and social problems.

It was a four-and-a-half-hour trip north by air from Resolute to Ellesmere, flying in a Twin Otter with no bathroom. I drank little before the trip and concentrate on the glaciers and mountains stretching out on every side: the scenery is what I imagined the world looked like before there were people.

View down Tanquary Fiord, Ellesmere Island. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A view down Tanquary Fiord, Ellesmere Island. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

The first time I visited the High Arctic, I stayed at Ellesmere National Park Reserve headquarters at Tanquary Fiord. I was glad to sleep in its heated winterhavens and have access to a heated living area in another structure. My hikes around the park headquarters showed me I needed better hiking boots and that I was not made to be a trekker with a heavy pack who hikes long days.

Still, I hiked for hours to climb a hill nearby, sinking into the melting permafrost and jumping over small streams that seemed to flow everywhere. I finally reached my objective, a muskox blind, built hundreds of years ago — or even longer — by early Inuit hunters.

Muskox blind, Tanquary Fiord, Ellesmere Island. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Muskox blind, Tanquary Fiord, Ellesmere Island. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

From this vantage point, they had been able to drive the muskoxen into the crevasse below me. I sat there for a while, gathering my energy and looking at a glacier that looked like a giant hand reaching down the mountain across the fiord. The park headquarters’ buildings looked like tiny dots.

No one knew I was here. I could stay here forever, or continue climbing. If I walked across the ledge I’d be able to see the valley beyond, but I was worried about my wet boots: It seemed easier to walk down instead of up, so that’s what I did.

The park, then a park reserve — it would become a full-fledged national park with a new name, Quttirnipaaq, in 2002 — was huge, nearly half the size of the province of New Brunswick, with terrain ranging from lakes to permanent ice shelves.

There was little government presence there — apart from the buzz of planes heading back and forth from the base at Alert to the north. But maintaining Canadian sovereignty wasn’t part of this park’s mission. Its wardens were much more worried about park management than politics.

I helped park warden Geoff Walker as he spent part of the day on his hands and knees, checking out 25 small plots for changes in vegetation. He counted flowers, noting if they were in bloom or going to seed. That was part of the park’s monitoring of Ellesmere for climate change, to see how the flowers change from year to year.

An ancient tent ring not far from Tanquary Fiord/ (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

An ancient tent ring not far from Tanquary Fiord. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Walker also checked out nearby archeological sites for any damage. The park contained more early Inuit sites, some from 4,000 years ago, than any other place in Canada. Most sites remained unexcavated, and included half-buried dwellings or stone caches, fox traps and muskox blinds.

Hikers were supposed to keep a distance from sites because any disturbance to the soil could last for years. Bulldozer tracks from the 1950s were still visible around the park headquarters, so motorized vehicles were no longer allowed. A long row of equipment, including old sleds and snowmobiles, was neatly lined up alongside the park buildings. Inside a nearby Quonset hut, stacks of unused supplies, more than 40 years old. That’s where we got our cans of food, some of which had vintage labels.

Geoff Walker, Tanquary Fiord park headquarters, July, 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Geoff Walker, Tanquary Fiord park headquarters, July, 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Walker wondered what to do with these relics from the modern era, but throwing away anything there was out of the question. Everything that came in was used, burned or sent back south at great expense. At least, less fuel was then being brought up in barrels to Tanquary because a  wind and solar power system furnished almost all the electricity needed by the park’s staff.

“It’s cost-efficient,” Walker said. “For a generator, we’d have to use hundreds of barrels of fuel.”

Along the airstrip, though, there were still many fuel barrels, for the Twin Otters that flew in and out of the park every day. About 500 people visited in the summer. To supplement its budget, the park collected minimal user fees from all visitors.

Although they were closer to the North Pole than to the nearest store or phone, many used to ask Walker what credit cards he accepted. Others wanted more facilities, and asked, for example, if showers were provided. That summer, some groups camped around the airstrips at Lake Hazen and Tanquary Fiord, overloading their meagre facilities.

A pair of Arctic hares by a weather station at the Tanquary Fiord. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

A pair of Arctic hares by a weather station at the Tanquary Fiord. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Walker felt uneasy babysitting hikers who found that they aren’t up to the rigorous demands of trekking in the park, and he was unhappy about the extra quantity of human waste and garbage they produced: He was the one who had to clean out the outhouses later.

One evening he and I joined a group of French trekkers who had been holed up at Tanquary for a few days. Their tarte-tatin dessert was great, but it turned out this group hadn’t even paid their park entry fee.

While I was in Tanquary the sun never set, but the season abruptly changed. One day the snow started falling, and our departure to Resolute was postponed.

A couple of other park employees, Monty Yank and Vicki Sahanatien, also hiked in. We sat in the weather haven that served as a kitchen and made elaborate meals from the ageing canned goods, keeping in touch with the dispatchers at the Polar Continental Shelf Project in Resolute to see when an airplane would come.

When we finally headed back to Resolute, we made a stop at the other park centre at Lake Hazen to pick up some other passengers. I ran to the bathroom. While I was out of the plane, my backpack with my computer and money was offloaded and I didn’t notice this until I landed in Resolute with an hour to make my flight south. I had no ticket and no money.

Even without a ticket, however, I was let on the jet in that pre-9/11 situation. I saw my backpack again the following week when it was brought down from Lake Hazen to Iqaluit. I would never leave my bag alone again, but the following summer I return to Ellesmere.

Poor weather means no airplanes fly into Tanquary in the end of July, 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Poor weather means no airplanes fly into Tanquary in the end of July, 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Then, I wanted to visit science camps. I’d been intrigued by what researchers had told me about the work they did and the dismal state of science in Canada’s North. During the 1980s, more than 200 research teams would fan out from Cornwallis Island every spring and summer to carry out projects on the land.

Polar Continental Shelf Project in Resolute Bay, 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Polar Continental Shelf Project in Resolute Bay, 1997. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)fewer than 100 field parties use Resolute as a staging point for research in the field. Few are Canadian. xthe Polar Continental Shelf Project was founded in 1958 to provide Canadian and international scientists with the logistical support needed for research in the High Arctic.

I learned that, since the 1980s, the Polar Continental Shelf Project’s budget had been slashed by half. That meant it now tried to move hundreds of people and aircraft in and out with fewer personnel. It was a bare-bones operation, pared back to the minimum.

At the same time, the numbers of American researchers who contracted the Polar Shelf for services were steadily increasing. They could draw from the millions of dollars set aside for Arctic research by their government’s 1984 Arctic Research and Policy Act. But, in 1997, Canada had no similar legislation, policy or budget to encourage Arctic research.

The Polar Shelf had a tidy little building beside the airport, with rooms for researchers and a cafeteria, which I visited on my way back from Ellesmere.

“I’m here from Nunatsiaq News. Does anybody want to talk me about their research?” I said as I entered the residence’s sitting area.

A few scientists responded: Others looked at me as if I’m the last person in the world they’d speak to.

Fossilized dinosaur droppings from Melville Island. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

Fossilized dinosaur droppings from Melville Island. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)

However, a few took advantage of the change to talk with me and, through the newspaper, with people in the North — public outreach that will soon become an obligation.

Two keen fossil hunters with the Museum of Nature showed me a fossilized dinosaur dropping from Melville Island.  Greg Henry from the University of British Columbia told me more about his climate change project and why I was counting flowers with Walker in Tanquary.

Jim Basinger, a paleo-botanist from the University of Saskatchewan, piqued my interest about an ancient fossil forest on Axel Heiberg Island. The following summer he invited me to go to Axel Heiberg — but instead of escaping controversy on that journey to the High Arctic in 1999, I head directly into it.

The next instalment of Like an iceberg goes live May 20.

You can read earlier instalments 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, “Qaggiq”

Like an iceberg, 1997, more “Qaggiq”

Like an iceberg, 1997, “Qaggiq” cont.

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., “Qaggiq and hockey”

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., “Brain surgery in POV”

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont.: “Masks on an island”

Like an iceberg, 1997 cont., “Abusers on the pulpit”

Like an iceberg, 1998, “Bearing gifts”