When I was a little girl, we lived in Ukkusiksalik as a nomadic Inuit family. My father, Marc Tungilik, and my brother, Kadluk, hunted for all our daily essentials. We were dependent on the animals for both clothing and food, and in the winter seal fat provided the oil for our qulliq (seal-oil lamp), which gave us light and heat. My mother, Angugatsiaq, prepared the sealskins to make waterproof boots and mitts, and double-sided pack bags for our dogs. We were free to roam the boundless land. Everyone had the freedom to live where they wanted. This is why Ukkusiksalik feels to me like a place of freedom and beauty.
I first met David Pelly in Naujaat (Repulse Bay) when he came to our house in the summer of 1986. I was visiting from Rankin Inlet to see my dad, to help him out and spend time with him. My mother had passed away the year before, and my father would follow her just a few weeks after this visit. It was a pleasure to interpret for David as he asked about Ukkusiksalik, and to hear the stories of my father, who was normally a quiet fellow.
Over the years, David befriended and interviewed many of the people who once lived in Ukkusiksalik. The storytellers were people like Leonie Sammurtok, who became a mother to many children in Chesterfield Inlet; Tuinnaq Kanayuk Bruce, who had memories of life at the Hudson’s Bay Company post in Ukkusiksalik; and Mariano Aupilarjuq, the late Inuit historian who was so instrumental in the creation of Nunavut. Several other elders who have left us now told their stories in order to leave behind a record and a sense of how so many of these families were connected.
All the people who were interviewed by David reminisced about their past, remembering how hard it was, but how joyous and free it felt at the time. I, too, was interviewed, which allowed me to look back at my childhood in Ukkusiksalik. I have such fond memories. It was an innocent and joyful time, living in such a beautiful and bountiful place.
I remember one autumn my father was building a rock and sod qarmaq (sod house) for us to live in. I watched him carry very big rocks. I was about three years old. I had just learned to walk again after recovering from polio. But at times I was running after him as fast as I could, sometimes holding my mother’s hand. I remember saying to her, “My dad is the strongest man on Earth” — in Inuktitut,* of course. I gleamed with pride. I remember when we first occupied the qarmaq, how warm and bright and cozy it felt when my mother lit the qulliq. I was only back there once, forty years later, when I saw that they really were big rocks!
I hope you will enjoy this book. It is a timeless and valuable work of true Inuit history. The land tells its story, as witnessed through the eyes of those we knew who lived in Ukkusiksalik, and those who came before them.
Theresie Tungilik
Ukkusiksalingmiut, Rankin Inlet, Nunavut
Former chair of the Ukkusiksalik Park Management Committee
* The language of the Inuit is known as Inuktitut, which literally means “sounds like an Inuk.”