Eminol | Norway | Sweden | Denmark | Sikunews | Hindi | Tamil | Polsk
New film Qapirangajuq speaks to climate change
“Our whole world is changing"
Published: 17.12.2010 04:47
“Our world has changed: land, sun environment,” says an elder in the hour-long film Qapirangajuq, which was shown at the ArcticNet conference in Ottawa where a public screening of the film took place Dec. 15, reports nunatsiaqonline.ca.

Keen Inuit observers— who were taught to evaluate weather conditions outside as children — appear to see the same climate change impacts that scientists

“Our whole world is changing,” Mary Simon, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kantami, said repeating the central message of the film, directed by Zach Kunuk of Igloolik Isuma Productions with Ian Mauro, a filmmaker with a PhD in environmental studies.

Filmed with the visual grace typical of Igloolik Isuma’s previous films, Qapirangajuq presents elders talking about climate change.

If there’s a point where elders strongly disagree with scientists, it’s on the number of polar bears — it’s increasing, they say.

And they also attribute a different causes for the poor physical condition of many polar bears— it’s not climate change but interference from biologists who tag and drug bears for surveys in noisy helicopters, they say.

Rancor between some scientists and Inuit about the differences between traditional knowledge and science even surfaced at this three-day conference on Arctic social and natural sciences— the largest annual gathering of its kind in Canada.

During the question period following the screening, Martha Flaherty, an Inuktitut translator in Ottawa, praised the film.

But she also bashed scientists for mistruths, such as suggesting how Inuit women have shrunk from carrying babies on their backs, when, Flaherty stressed, Inuit women are actually getting taller.

And a biologist in the audience had his own questions for Kunuk and Mauro: he wanted to know how their film attributes many changes in the environment to climate change, but not those affecting polar bears and why a population of polar bears which hasn’t been handled by biologists is still in decline.

The film smartly avoids any clash between their traditional knowledge and science by focusing exclusively on Inuit elders.

Elders from Arviat, Igloolik, Resolute Bay and Pangnirtung talk about melting sea ice, the land heating up, seals losing their vigour, and polar bears heading onto the land because the sea ice has shrunk.

But, while most people in southern Canada haven’t changed their lifestyle due to climate changes, in Pangnirtung, they’ve seen essential infrastructure— such as the bridge that connects two sides of the community— wash away.

Their new warmer world also looks different, too. The elders talk about seeing the sun, moon and stars in different positions — a phenomenon related to a polar mirage caused by warm air.

The impacts of climate change have affected Inuit so much that if the human race is to die out, Inuit may be the first to go, Paul Quassa of Igloolik said

Elders turned out in great numbers when Qapirangajuq was shown in Pangnirtung, but didn’t comment much on the film, Kunuk said.

“The film speaks for itself,” he said.

And anyone can view Qapirangajuq for free by visiting the Isuma television site.
Share/Save/Bookmark
Book and Movie Reviews
17.12.2010 13:31
Siku's pause has extended as considered whether to continue this daily circumpolar news round-up In the meantime, we encourage you to consult our archived material, much of which is not accessible elsewhere on the internet.
Read more
17.12.2010 04:59

"We recognize that the Mackenzie Gas Project would have much larger and more far-reaching effects than previous developments in the North"
Read more
16.12.2010 12:16
The park lies in the Novaya Zemlya archipelago, an area known for its rich bird cliffs and large populations of walrus and polar bears. 
Read more
16.12.2010 12:12
“We have dramatic changes taking place"
Read more
16.12.2010 12:08
"They have not consulted Inuit"
Read more
16.12.2010 12:05
And they may end up the top predator.
Read more
16.12.2010 11:56
Unlike Axel Heiberg's fossil forest, this one lies with the national park on Ellesmere.
Read more
15.12.2010 11:33
“If [the federal government] is serious about sovereignty and Canada’s North, we really need viable communities to be living in"
Read more
15.12.2010 11:25
"I am delighted that the negotiations ended with progress at key points such as adaptation to climate change, shaping and formal approval of a Green Fund, and transferring knowledge and technology"
Read more
15.12.2010 11:15

A single household will dispose of 60-65 kilos of still edible food per year, a new study found.
Read more
15.12.2010 11:10

Alaska filed a lawsuit Dec. 14 in an effort to stop the National Marine Fisheries Service's plan to protect endangered sea lions.
Read more
15.12.2010 11:02
"It was a good clean race"
Read more
15.12.2010 10:55
The work of Inuk artist and writer Alootook Ipellie continues to be appreciated— mainly in Europe.
Read more
14.12.2010 12:43
The Yellowknife woman was caught swallowing crack that she had been selling while pregnant.
Read more
14.12.2010 12:35
A new competitor, Norwegian, emerges on the scene.
Read more
14.12.2010 12:29
Moscow is trying to convince the international community that it has a greater claim to the Arctic.
Read more