Qimmiq: Canada's Arctic Dog

198124 min 15 secFilm: Documentary

Script: Mary Anne DeWolf

Produced for the NFB by Inuk Films, Northwest Territories, for the Canadian Department of Indian and Northern Affairs.

This title is an acquisition.

The Eskimo dog--the Qimmiq--has been an integral part of northern Canadian life for almost two thousand years. Archival photographs and film footage illustrate how this hard-working purebred was used for hunting, pulling sleds and keeping polar bears at bay. However, by 1975, the breed, decimated by a changing northern lifestyle, was all but extinct. This inspiring documentary shows the dedicated efforts of biologist Dr. William Carpenter to revitalize the strain and how, with support from local Inuit societies, his breeding project has resulted in a growing and once again thriving Qimmiq population.

Availability


Subject categories


  • Indigenous Peoples in Canada (Inuit) > Dogs
  • Animals > Indigenous ConcernsWorking Animals

Credits


script
Mary Anne DeWolf
sound
Mary Anne DeWolf
camera
Andrew Steen
editing
Michael Smith
re-recording
Barry P. Jones
narrator
Campbell Lane