CBCnews

Inuvik, Old Crow welcome Olympic torch

Last Updated: Thursday, November 5, 2009 | 4:22 PM CT

The Olympic torch is carried through the streets of Inuvik, N.W.T., late Wednesday afternoon.The Olympic torch is carried through the streets of Inuvik, N.W.T., late Wednesday afternoon. (CBC)

The Olympic flame is on its way to western Nunavut and Yellowknife on Thursday, after spending the previous day in two communities above the Arctic Circle.

Residents in both Inuvik, N.W.T., and Old Crow, Yukon, followed their local torch relays Wednesday with celebrations showcasing their aboriginal cultures.

In Inuvik, where temperatures felt like -30 C with the windchill, dancers jigged to fiddle music while people took part in an Inuvialuit blanket toss led by Abel Tingmiak.

"I'm representing my people and the whole North around here," said Tingmiak, who was also the final torchbearer in the Inuvik torch relay.

Cultural delegation

Tingmiak will be part of a northern cultural delegation at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver next year, as officials across the North work to ensure strong northern representation at the games.

"As Inuit across the country, we're been working on making sure that our presence is known and our presence will be felt at the Olympics," said Nellie Cournoyea, CEO of the Inuvialuit Regional Corp. in Inuvik.

The problem, Cournoyea said, is that there won't be enough funding to send everyone who wants to be in the northern cultural group.

There are currently no Northwest Territories athletes on the Canadian Olympic team, although a handful of athletes have yet to find out early next year if they will qualify.

But Sharon Firth — a homegrown cross-country skier who competed in four Winter Olympics — said more can be done to help northern and aboriginal athletes get on the Olympic team.

Firth was one of seven Olympic skiiers who stared out in T.E.S.T., the Territorial Experimental Ski Training program in the Northwest Territories during the late 1960s and early 1970s.

"They can do a lot more, you know, getting aboriginal athletes into mainstream sports," she said, adding that she would like to see young athletes in remote northern communities get more encouragement and financial support.

'All pumped up now'

Before arriving in Inuvik, the Olympic torch spent Wednesday afternoon in Old Crow, home of the Vuntut Gwitchin First Nation, where many of the community's 300 residents turned out for the torch relay and a Gwitchin cultural celebration.

"Oh, I loved it. It was really exciting, I really enjoyed it," said Erika Tizya, who ran the first leg of the relay in Old Crow under sunny skies but cold winds.

"It was nice to all the community out supporting us and that really made me feel proud."

Torchbearer Alan Benjamin, who ran his leg of the relay in traditional snowshoes, said he just wished the Winter Olympics had a competition for snowshoe racers over the age of 50.

"It's pretty awesome. I'm all pumped up now," Benjamin said. "Now it's going to keep me motivated and training, and I'll be a snowshoer forever."

Residents put on a Gwitchin fashion show after the relay, along with fiddle music and jigging.

Local volunteers pulled the visitors from the Vancouver Olympics up on the dance floor before giving them a taste of local salmon and caribou.

"I'm telling you, this has been such an amazing day," Old Crow relay organizer Lorraine Netro enthused.

"What can I say? I'm going to be in tears right now if I keep going. It went so well."

The torch was on its way Thursday to Kugluktuk, Nunavut, before going to Yellowknife and the nearby communities of N'dilo and Dettah later that afternoon.

  •  
 

Video

    Related

    Audio

    Daniel MacIsaac reports from the Olympic torch relay in Inuvik, N.W.T. (Runs: 1:23)
    Play: Real Media »
    Dave Croft reports from the torch relay in Old Crow, Yukon (Runs: 1:21)
    Play: Real Media »

    North Headlines

    NWT population dips slightly: StatsCan
    About 400 people left the Northwest Territories for other parts of Canada between July and October.
    2 Inuit sculptors share Nunavut art award
    Two of the North's most celebrated sculptors — Kiawak Ashoona of Cape Dorset and Paul Malliki of Repulse Bay — will split the Nunavut Commissioner's Art Award.
    Mackenzie Valley pipeline report expected this week
    More than three years after its original deadline, the long-awaited Joint Review Panel will finally table its report on the Mackenzie Valley pipeline's environmental and social effects.
    Abandoned dogs head to southern shelters
    Stray dogs from the Northwest Territories are travelling south this holiday season.
    Ottawa to counter online sealing opposition
    The federal government plans to step up its efforts to fight opposition to the Canadian seal hunt by countering the online campaigns created by anti-sealing groups.

    Canada Headlines

    Misconduct ruling against RCMP officers OK, court says Video
    The Braidwood Inquiry can issue findings of misconduct against the RCMP officers involved in the death of Robert Dziekanski, according to a ruling issued Tuesday by the B.C. Court of Appeal.
    Mountie arrested in Ottawa officer's killing Video
    Ottawa police Const. Eric Czapnik is dead, and the Mountie arrested in Czapnik's stabbing death is under suspension after receiving a conditional discharge in 2007 for threatening a Mormon bishop in Regina with a knife.
    Mayor expresses Ottawa's sorrow at officer's death
    The mayor of Ottawa has reacted with shock and sorrow at the stabbing death of one of the city's police officers.
    Vancouver carjacking leaves 4 injured Video
    An apparent carjacking on West Georgia Street in downtown Vancouver has left four people injured following a bizarre string of events that appeared to begin with a confrontation between a driver and a pedestrian.
    Lineups continue at Canadian airports Video
    Lineups are persisting at Canadian airports as travellers bound for the U.S. continue to face beefed-up security measures.

    People who read this also read …

    Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

    Headlines

    Mountie arrested in Ottawa officer's killing Video
    Ottawa police Const. Eric Czapnik is dead, and the Mountie arrested in Czapnik's stabbing death is under suspension after receiving a conditional discharge in 2007 for threatening a Mormon bishop in Regina with a knife.
    'Systemic failure' led to plane bombing attempt: Obama
    President Barack Obama says the United States must move quickly to fix the flaws in its security systems that allowed a man to attempt to set off a bomb on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit.
    Lineups continue at Canadian airports Video
    Lineups are persisting at Canadian airports as travellers bound for the U.S. continue to face beefed-up security measures.
    Mob retaliation possible after Rizzuto slaying Video
    Mafia experts are warning of a potential organized crime war following reports that Nick Rizzuto Jr., the son of Canada's most powerful mobster, has been killed in Montreal.
    Misconduct ruling against RCMP officers OK, court says Video
    The Braidwood Inquiry can issue findings of misconduct against the RCMP officers involved in the death of Robert Dziekanski, according to a ruling issued Tuesday by the B.C. Court of Appeal.