NFB Collection
Qimmit: A Clash of Two Truths (Inuktitut Version)
20101 h 8 min 8 secFilm: Documentary
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.
Availability
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)