Long-awaited apology to relocated families
Apology on behalf of Canada for the relocation of Inuit families in the 1950s
On behalf of the Government of Canada and all Canadians, I would like to offer a full and sincere apology to the Inuit for the relocation of families from Inukjuak and Pond Inlet to Grise Fiord and Resolute Bay during the 1950s.
I would like to express my deepest sorry for the extreme hardship and suffering caused by the relocation. The families were separated from their home communities and extended families by more than a thousand kilometers. They were not provided with adequate shelter and supplies. They were not properly informed of how far away and how different from Inukjuak their new homes would be, and they were not aware that they would be separated into two communities once they arrived in the High Arctic. Moreover, the Government failed to act on its promise to return anyone that did not wish to stay in the High Arctic to their old homes.
The Government of Canada deeply regrets the mistakes and broken promises of this dark chapter of our history and apologizes for the High Arctic relocation having taken place. I would like to pay tribute to the relocatees for their perseverance and courage. Despite the suffering and hardship, the relocatees and their descendants were successful in building vibrant communities in Grise Fiord and Resolute Bay. The Government of Canada recognizes that these communities have contributed to a strong Canadian presence in the High Arctic.
The relocation of Inuit families to the High Arctic is a tragic chapter in Canada’s history that we should not forget, but that we must acknowledge, learn from and teach our children. Acknowledging our shared history allows us to move forward in partnership and in a spirit of reconciliation. The Government of Canada and the Inuit have accomplished many great things together, and all Canadians have benefitted from the contributions of Inuit to our culture and history. We must continue to strengthen our connections and deepen our understanding and respect. We must jointly build a stronger, healthier and more vibrant Inuit Nunangat and, in turn, build a stronger, healthier and more vibrant Canada.
The Government of Canada hopes that this apology will help heal the wounds caused by events that began nearly 60 years ago and turn the page on this sad chapter in Canada’s history. May it strengthen the foundation upon which the Government of Canada and the Inuit can build and help keep the True North Strong and Free.
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Canada apologizes for 'dark chapter' The Canadian government apologized yesterday to Inuit families for relocating groups from their homes in Inukjuak, in no 1950s. Indian Affairs and Northern Development Minister John Duncan apologized on behalf of all Canadians for the "hardship, suffering and loss they experienced as a result of the relocation."
An apology for Inuit five decades in the making The sobbing didn’t begin until they read the names of the dead. For more than an hour, a group of Inuit residents sat quietly in a small gymnasium, listening to an apology that was more than five decades in the making. John Duncan, the newly appointed Indian Affairs Minister, arrived here on the northeastern shore of Hudson Bay Wednesday to say the Canadian government was sorry for uprooting families from their traditional homes and shipping them to remote reaches of the Arctic during the 1950s.
Ottawa apologizes to Inuit for using them as 'human flagpoles' in 1950's - INUKJUAK, Que. - Larry Audlalak wasn't quite three years old when his family finally gave in to the insistent promises of the RCMP officer and left their comfortable lands along Hudson Bay's northern coast for the frigid unknown of the High Arctic.
Ottawa apologizes for Inuit relocation OTTAWA — Nearly 60 years after 87
Inuit were relocated to the harsh environment of the High Arctic to bolster Canada's presence in the North, the federal government has apologized for their "hardship, suffering, and loss." All told, 19 families were relocated from Inukjuak in Northern Quebec and three families were moved from Pond Inlet and sent to Grise Fiord and Resolute Bay — 1,200 km away — in the High Arctic in the 1950's.
Inuit get federal apology for forced relocation The Canadian government says it regrets the "mistakes and broken promises" it made in forcing some Inuit to relocate to the High Arctic in the 1950s. Indian and Northern Affairs Minister John Duncan issued a formal apology Wednesday for the government's controversial High Arctic relocation program, in which 87 Inuit were relocated about 1,200 kilometres to Canada's most northerly settlements.
Ottawa apologizes to Inuit for using them as 'human flagpoles' - OTTAWA – They were moved 2,000 kilometres north from their homes, from a land of lush tundra to a harsh Arctic desert and left to fend for themselves. They became known as the “High Arctic exiles” and for the Inuit, the move in the 1950s has remained a source of anger and anguish. On Wednesday, Ottawa abandoned years of resistance and formally apologized to Inuit families for what it calls a “tragic chapter” in the country’s history.
Canada says sorry to High Arctic exiles"We would like to offer a full and sincere apology to Inuit for the relocation of families from Inukjuak and Pond Inlet to Grise Fiord and Resolute Bay during the 1950s". More than 14 years after Ron Irwin, then the minister of Indian affairs and northern development, settled financially with the High Arctic exiles on behalf of Canada, the survivors and descendants of the 19 Inuit families who were moved to Resolute Bay in 1953 and...