Qimmit: A Clash of Two Truths

20101 h 8 min 8 secFilm: Documentary

G

Direction: Ole GjerstadJoelie Sanguya

Production: Joe MacDonald (National Film Board of Canada)Charlotte De Wolff (Piksuk Media Inc.)Derek Mazur (National Film Board of Canada)

Script: Ole GjerstadJoelie Sanguya

Co-produced by Piksuk Media Inc. and the National Film Board of Canada.

For the Inuit, the sled dog symbolized a way of life as well as a deep connection to the land. They depended upon the dogs for hunting, transportation and companionship: They were essential to survival. But from the 1950s to the 1970s, the Inuit’s semi-nomadic way of life all but vanished. The sled dog population dropped from an estimated 20,000 to just a few hundred dogs. Many Inuit believe the dogs were deliberately killed by the RCMP as part of a government policy to force them off the land – and into “civilization.”  The RCMP denies there was any conscious policy on their part. With the influx of people into settled communities, they argue, the sled dogs became redundant. Qimmit: A Clash of Two Truths explores the mystery of how and why the sled dogs disappeared, a mystery that has left deep wounds across Canada’s Arctic.

Subject categories


  • Indigenous Peoples in Canada (Inuit) > DogsTraditional way of life
  • National Security and Defence > Royal Canadian Mounted Police
  • Animals > Working Animals
  • History and Citizenship Education > Culture and Currents of Thought (1500-present)
  • Indigenous Studies > History/PoliticsIssues and Contemporary Challenges

Credits


writer
Ole Gjerstad
Joelie Sanguya
director
Ole Gjerstad
Joelie Sanguya
director of photography
David Poisey
producer
Joe MacDonald
Charlotte De Wolff
executive producer
Charlotte De Wolff
Derek Mazur

Awards


  • Rigoberta Menchu Second PrizeFirst Peoples' Festival (Land InSights)