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Inuvik hosts national youth summit
Young people set priorities for Inuit council

Katie May
Northern News Services
Published Thursday, August 26, 2010

INUVIK - Speakers at a national Inuit youth forum say governments should focus on aboriginal health, education, and the preservation of Inuit culture.

About 70 Inuit ages 15 to 30 from across Canada gathered at the Inuvik's Midnight Sun Recreation Complex last week for the youth and elders summit. The summit, led by the National Inuit Youth Council (NIYC), on which local Inuvialuit are represented, brought together young people and a small group of elders from the Beaufort Delta region of NWT, Nunavut, and northern Quebec.

NNSL photo/graphic

Inuvik hosted a national youth summit Aug. 16 to 20 led by the National Inuit Youth Council, on which local Inuvialuit are represented. The youth heard from guest speakers, participated in workshops and went on an on-the-land trip last week. From left, Keenan Carpenter from Sachs Harbour, David Lucas from Tuk, Alecia Lennie and Douglas Price, both from Inuvik. - Katie May/NNSL photo

The forum became the backdrop for lively discussions about Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, suicide prevention, Northern post-secondary education, oil and gas exploration and more as Inuit youth met to help set priorities for an onslaught of issues facing their generation.

More than 30 youths from the Inuvialuit communities of Inuvik, Aklavik, Tuktoyaktuk, Paulatuk, Sachs Harbour and Ulukhaktok decided that one of the best things the youth council could do for their region would be to provide more opportunities for regional gatherings. That way, they said, young people would be another step closer to working together to achieve their priorities, including a more advanced and adaptable school curriculum and improved recreation facilities for sports and community events.

Inuvik teen Alecia Lennie got involved because she wanted to meet new people, and she said last week she'd already learned a lot, particularly by participating in a post-secondary education forum where recent college graduates offered advice.

"They said not to pick (a career) that you don't really want to do, but to go for what you want," the Grade 12 student said. "It just encouraged me to keep on going with what I really want to do."

Douglas Price, also from Inuvik, said he wants to be a youth leader and hoped hearing from other young people at the summit would put him on the right path.

"It's surprisingly everything I wanted it to be," he said. "I'm learning about oil and gas, as well as helping our people, the way it's supposed to be. Everyone here is getting together like our ancestors did."

For Tuk's David Lucas, "it's all about education."

He was happy to be sitting in on a variety of workshops, particularly an information session on the Canadian Rangers, to learn more about his culture and his options as a young adult.

"It's great," he said.

Holly Donley, local summit co-ordinator for the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation, said the workshops give young people a chance to address issues that Inuit people face on a daily basis while learning about cultural differences among Canadian Inuit.

"What we're wanting to accomplish is to keep our culture going and to find more ways to do that," she said. "This is a good opportunity for local Inuvialuit to meet other Inuit from all over Canada. It's an even better opportunity for other youth not from here to see other regions."

After arriving Aug. 16, the youth council swore in its new president, Jennifer Watkins of Kuujjuaq, a village in Nunavik, northern Quebec. Watkins takes over from past president Jesse Mike. Over the course of the summit, which wrapped up Aug. 19, the youth divided into regional groups to help set priorities for the NIYC's governance, participated in workshops on topics ranging from Inuit history to magazine publishing - and the council launched its own magazine, Nipiit, or "Our Voice" at the same time.

One of the guest speakers the youth heard from was NWT premier Floyd Roland. Roland offered as an inspirational tale his story of growing up in Inuvik, from a small boy who "learned to run fast so I wouldn't get beat up," to leader of the territorial government.

"If a boy from Co-op Hill in Inuvik can be the premier of the Northwest Territories, anybody can," he said, to applause from the audience.

Organizers chose Alisa Blake from Fort McPherson, a past participant in the youth forum, as a role model for this year's summit.

Blake told the youths she's going to aviation school to pursue her dream of becoming a pilot, and urged each of them not to give up on their dreams.

"I never, ever set out to be a role model or a leader," she said. "I just wanted to do what I always wanted to do and that's fly airplanes. If it takes me another five years to do it, then it takes another five years. But I'm still going to do it."

The first NIYC youth summit was held in Kuujjuaq in 1994 and since then young people have gathered regularly, if not annually, in various Inuit regions across Canada. Inuvik last hosted the event in 2002.

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