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Day 14 — Goodbyes at Iqaluit
Location: Iqaluit
Aboard ship as we sail up Frobisher Bay toward Iqaluit, there is much to do with packing
and organizing. Some of our crew will leave the expedition here, while the rest will travel
south to Ottawa and on to the four corners of North America and the world. With a final
Zodiac trip from ship to shore, we're treated to another warm and cordial community
welcome, with singing, speeches and another lovely shared meal. This time it's Phillip
Comeau's (our resident rapper's) grandmother, Anne Meekitjuk Hanson, the Commissioner
of Nunavut, who officially welcomes us, saying how pleased she is to support what we're
doing. There are songs and celebratory words of various kinds, including a special address
by Sheila Watt-Cloutier, past chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Council.
In a couple of sentences, she crystallizes what we have learned in two weeks at sea: "The
environment is just so important. We never see the disconnect because we're so close
to it. And, of course, we're in a world today in an urban setting where much of the
disconnect between people and their neighbours and between people and the environment is
why we're debating this whole thing about climate change in the first place. So you've
been travelling in a land where we have not disconnected from any of that. I'm sure
you have palpably felt that throughout your trip, wherever you went, where you saw the wildlife
and saw how all of that is connected. That is the story I try to tell in that way, of letting
the world know that we must all come together as a shared humanity. It is through connectivity
and understanding, through all of these connections that we can move mountains." Amen,
Sheila!
Posted by James Raffan on Thursday, August 16th,
2007
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