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Teaching above the Arctic Circle makes Port Townsend woman humble

Teaching above the Arctic Circle makes Port Townsend woman humble | Inuit Nunangat Stories | Scoop.it

[excerpt]

Socks on the doorknobs prevent your hand from freezing to the metal.

Locking your front door isn’t a good idea.

Raw seal intestines are tastier than whale.

Coping with extreme cold and swallowing seal innards are some of the things that Katie Campbell, a 2006 Port Townsend High School graduate, has learned to take in stride in her first year of teaching special education in Kivalina, Alaska, a coastal village on a barrier reef 127 miles above the Arctic Circle.

She’s also learned that Inupiat people speak with their faces — raising the eyebrows means yes, scrunching up the face means no.

“I don’t think any of my students has said ‘yes’ or ‘no’ out loud since school started,” said Campbell, 23.

Campbell left Port Townsend in August for the isolated village.

When she accepted the job, people said she was crazy, but Campbell has thrived on the Arctic adventure, embracing a different culture and climate with open arms.

“Every day is something new, something I haven’t witnessed before,” she said in an interview in Port Townsend.

When she arrived in Kivalina four months ago, there were 17 hours of daylight each day.

When she left Dec. 17, there were six minutes.

She has experienced temperatures of 40 below zero, scraped snowdrifts off the windows so she could see out of the house and survived a storm with 100-plus-mph winds that blew waves over the narrow reef and the village airstrip.

Kivalina is one of the coast villages whose existence is threatened by global warming, she explained. In the past, an ice wall formed high enough to block waves from engulfing the reef.

Living in a village that clings to survival has taught her what’s important and what you can live without, Campbell said.

“I’ve learned to be humble,” she said.

“We’re so spoiled in the lower 48 states.”

[...]

 

Campbell posts photos and entries on her blog st

http://katie2ak.tumblr.com/

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RCMP Special Const. Andrew Ooyoumut of Baker Lake Nunavut honoured at RCMP national memorial service

[excerpts] RCMP Special Const. Andrew Ooyoumut once trekked through a blizzard to deliver supplies to starving Inuit families....

Ooyoumut, who was 37, drowned in the Kikatavyuk River in 1954 while helping to catch fish to feed RCMP sled dogs. ...

The North was always home for Ooyoumut.

Ooyoumut's granddaughter, Deborah Kigjugalik Webster, said he left a traditional, nomadic life to move into the new settlement of Baker Lake, in what was then Northwest Territories and is now Nunavut. He was hired by the RCMP in 1946.

Ooyoumut died July 21, 1954 — it was his eldest daughter's birthday. He left behind a wife and four children.

Webster never got a chance to meet her grandfather, but as a heritage specialist, she dug into his past, pouring over service records.

"I found out that as a special constable, he was working during the time of famine in the 1950s and some people remember him very well because in that time he brought supplies to them so that they wouldn't starve. He went to their camps and brought food supplies," Webster said.

"I've heard elders talking about that, that he was a very kind man that way.

"I know from reading the service file, he would even travel in bad weather and I remember his supervisor making note of that in the service file, saying that he travelled during a blizzard. Basically he was risking his own life to get the food to people who were starving."

Webster said special constables played an important role in helping the RCMP patrol the North. She said her grandfather had a lot of duties with the force, but was never properly acknowledged after his death.

She said she has been digging for access to information, "running into brick walls" and fighting for more than 15 years for recognition.

Webster's grandmother passed away a few years ago. But Webster, her mother, and two aunts will be at the ceremony at the RCMP training academy in Regina on Sunday wearing pukiliks — traditional clothing from Baker Lake that her grandmother made. She said it will be an important time for her family.

"It has been a long time coming," said Webster.

"For me when I hear Ooyoumut's name called out, I think that will be the most touching moment for me. For Ooyoumut to be finally honoured properly and shown the respect he deserves, it will mean a tremendous amount. To be there, too, with my mother and her two sisters is special because they lived without their father."

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