Inuk elder honoured for helping the home front during Second World War
OTTAWA — For the war effort in the 1940s, Qapik Attagutsiak remembers the local Catholic priest urging her and her family to collect walrus and seal bones from their island near Igloolik, and even the bodies of dogs that had died from disease.
In the Second World War, Canadians across the country were encouraged to salvage whatever waste materials they could, including metal, rubber, paper and rags.
The call for raw materials extended into the High Arctic, where Inuit communities were encouraged to collect bones and carcasses to be transported south, to be rendered and processed into glues and chemicals used in ammunition and aircraft, as well as for fertilizer to grow food.
Attagutsiak’s family was among those that helped. Eighty years later, Attagutsiak is the last known survivor of those Inuit efforts and will be recognized at a ceremony organized by Parks Canada and the Canadian Armed Forces at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Que.