Zacharias Kunuk

Profile

Zacharias Kunuk's picture
I was born in 1957 in a sod house at Kapuivik, my family’s winter camp site in our life on the land. We were living happily like my ancestors waking up with frozen kamiks for a pillow. In 1965, my parents were told by Government workers, “You should send your kids to school or you could lose your family allowance.” I was nine years old getting ready to be like my father. The next summer I was on the boat to Igloolik with my brother. While my parents lived on the land I stayed in town and learned the English language. Most weeks they showed movies at the Community Hall. They cost a quarter to get in. That’s when I started carving soapstone to get money for the movies. I remember John Wayne in the West. He spearheads the U.S. cavalry and kills some Indians at the fort. One time the scouts didn’t return, we go out where there’s arrows sticking out of dead soldiers and horses and one soldier says, ‘What kind of Indians did this!’ I was shocked too. That’s what I learned in my education, to think like one of the soldiers.When I begun to see myself as an aboriginal person and a filmmaker, I learnt there are different ways to tell the same story. People in Igloolik learnt through storytelling who we were and where we came from for 4000 years without a written language. Then foreign missionaries preached Paul’s Epistles to my parents in Inuktitut saying, ‘Turn away from your old way of life.’ These days Igloolik young people are suiciding at a terrible rate. 4000 years of oral history silenced by fifty years of priests, schools and cable TV? This death of history is happening in my lifetime. How were shamans tied? Where do suicides go? What will I answer when I’m an elder and don’t know anything about it? Will I have anything to say? Lately, I want to write to the Bishop and say ‘Let my people go!’ In the 1970’s, Igloolik voted twice against TV from the south since there was nothing in Inuktitut, nothing in it for us. But I noticed when my father and his friends came back from hunting they would always sit down with tea and tell the story of their hunt. And I thought it would be great to film hunting trips so you wouldn’t have to tell it, just show it. In 1981 I sold some carvings and bought a video camera. When I watched my videos I noticed kids gathered outside my window looking in to see the TV. That was how special it was at the beginning. In 1985, I received my first Canada Council grant to produce an independent video, From Inuk Point of View, on my summer holiday. I was director, Paul Apak editor, Pauloosie Qulitalik the cultural narrator, and Norman Cohn, cameraman. This became our Isuma team. Can Inuit bring storytelling into the new millennium? Can we listen to our elders before they all pass away? Can we save our youth from killing themselves at ten times the national rate? Can producing community TV in Igloolik make our community, region and country stronger? Is there room in Canadian filmmaking for our way of seeing ourselves? To try to answer these questions we want to show how our ancestors survived by the strength of their community and their wits, and how new ways of storytelling today can help our community survive another thousand years. Our name Isuma means “to think,” as in Thinking Productions. Young and old work together to keep our ancestors’ knowledge alive. We create traditional artifacts, digital multimedia and desperately needed jobs in the same activity. Our productions give an artist’s view for all to see where we came from: what Inuit were able to do then and what we are able to do now.See more

Activity

  • 1h 32m 8s

    I will Come Back As A BABY

    uploaded by: Carol Kunnuk

    channel: Igloolik | ᐃᒡᓗᓕᒃ

    Je reviendrai comme un enfant

    Actor Nasi Sayegh, a stranger in a foreign land, listens to stories of naming from the residents of the Arctic community of Igloolik, drawing a wonderful interrogation on identity.

    A film by Christian Merlhiot

    France, 2013, 92 minutes

    English & French Subtitles

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    uploaded date: 14-04-2014

  • 5m 48s

    Angajuksakuluk

    uploaded by: derekman88

    channel: Igloolik | ᐃᒡᓗᓕᒃ

    This is a Northern Haze song titled "Angajuksakuluk" was playing with Momo and his brother Aka Bangoura and they are from Guinea, Africa. We had the pleasure of mixing our Inuktitut song with little bit of African beat.

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    uploaded date: 31-03-2014

  • 23m 33s

    Kikkukia Documentary

    uploaded by: derekman88

    channel: Artcirq

    A short documentary about the band Kikkukia from Igloolik, Nunavut. Story about how they started playing together and the events they shared together as a group.

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    uploaded date: 07-03-2014

  • Information

    uploaded by: John Hodgins

    channel: Kingulliit

    Credits

    Direction : Stéphane Rituit

    Coordination : Sylvie Côté Chew, Léa Hiram, Marie-Ève Provencher

    Digitization of archival fims:

    Description of scenes: Léa Hiram, Marie-Pierre Gadoua

    Shooting of Director’s comments, technical assistance: Ralitsa Doncheva

    Translation : Minnie Napartuk, Robyn Bryant

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    uploaded date: 13-02-2014

  • Home

    uploaded by: John Hodgins

    channel: Kingulliit

    "Kingulliit" refers to the generation of Inuit born in the first thirty years of the 20th century. They were called the "next generation" because they were the first in centuries to confront a world fundamentally different from the unchanging and known world mastered by countless generations since time immemorial.… Read more

    uploaded date: 13-02-2014

  • Test text post

    uploaded by: John Hodgins

    channel: Kingulliit

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut commodo augue ligula, quis mollis dui mollis vitae. Nam ac velit nec orci pulvinar lobortis. Phasellus nulla neque, aliquet vitae sagittis eget, auctor eu eros.… Read more

    uploaded date: 12-02-2014

  • ARTCO

    uploaded by: David Ertel

    <?php echo t('ARTCO "Artisans of Today\'s Communities" is a project led by Kingulliit Productions and IsumaTV where Inuit and Cree children use new media tools to explore their past and present realities, practice collective action and create a better future.') ?>

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    uploaded date: 22-08-2011

  • Inuit Cree Warfare

    uploaded by: Stéphane Rituit

    "Inuit Cree Warfare" is the development/research title of one of Isuma's new feature film.

    We will share on this channel our researches and stories behind this part of our History.

    This project is led by: Zacharias Kunuk (Inuk), Ron Sheshamush (Cree) and Neil Diamond (Cree).

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    uploaded date: 06-08-2010

  • Kingulliit

    uploaded by: Stéphane Rituit

    ᑭᖑᓪᓖᑦ ᐅᖄᕗᖅ ᐃᓄᓐᓂᒃ ᐃᓅᓕᓚᐅᕐᓯᒪᔪᓂᒃ 1900-ᐄᑦ ᐊᕐᕌᒍᕐᖄᕕᓂᖏᓐᓂ 30-ᓂ. ᐊᑦᓯᔭᐅᒪᔪᕕᓃᑦ `ᑭᖑᕚᖑᓕᕐᑐᑦ` ᓯᕗᓪᓕᐹᐅᓐᓂᕋᒥᒃ ᐊᕐᕌᒍᒐᓴᕐᔪᐊᓂ ᓵᑦᓯᓱᑎᒃ ᐊᑦᔨᐅᖏᑦᑐᒥᒃ ᓄᓇᕐᔪᐊᖑᒻᒥᔪᒥᒃ ᐊᓯᑦᔨᓚᐅᕐᓯᒪᓐᖏᑑᑉ ᖃᐅᔨᒻᒫᕆᔭᐅᑦᓱᓂᓗ ᓴᓂᐊᓐᓂᑦ ᑲᒪᒋᔭᐅᓕᓂᒻᒪᕆᐅᑦᓱᓂ ᐊᒥᓱᒐᓴᕐᔪᐊᓄᑦ ᑭᒍᕚᕇᕐᑎᑐᓄᑦ ᑌᑦᓱᒪᓐᖓᓂᐊᓗᒃ.… Read more

    uploaded date: 04-12-2012