Waterloo Region Record

Angry Inuk,

- Victoria Ahearn The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Growing up in Iqaluit, Alethea Arnaquq-Baril went seal hunting with her family and learned how to use the entire mammal for food, clothing and other needs.

She was raised to respect the seal and was saddened when she realized animal welfare groups were portraying the hunt as evil and greedy, creating campaigns that crushed their industry.

Arnaquq-Baril is hoping to clear up misconcept­ions about the seal hunt and raise awareness about the Inuit role in it in the new documentar­y “Angry Inuk.”

“Mainly, what I’m hoping is that when people see this film, they’ll recognize that Inuit are not only an important part of the commercial seal skin market,” she says, “but that the majority of commercial seal hunters are Inuit who eat the meat and share the meat with their friends and family and really depend on those seal skin sales in order to buy more fuel and ammunition to continue hunting.

“It’s a food security issue for us. Seven in 10 Inuit children go to school hungry, and I think these antiseal-hunt campaigns are a factor in the state of poverty and hunger that exists all across the North today.”

“Angry Inuk” made its world premiere at Toronto’s Hot Docs Canadian Internatio­nal Documentar­y Festival, which runs through Sunday.

According to the doc, anti-sealing campaigns almost entirely depict the spring hunt around Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, making it seem as if most seal skins come from there. But what many don’t realize is that most seal hunters are actually Inuit and hunt around the Canadian Arctic as well as Alaska, Greenland and Russia, Arnaquq-Baril says.

The film also posits that fighting seal hunting is an important part of fundraisin­g campaigns for animal rights groups.

“You see a couple of seal hunts in the film, so people can see for themselves and decide for themselves whether they think it’s inhumane or not,” says Arnaquq-Baril.

“But historical­ly, Inuit haven’t been challenged a whole lot on how we kill seals and I think largely because when people see it, they see Inuit respect the animal and use all of the meat and the skin . ... Our problem is even just being heard when we say, ‘We sell seal skins and we are part of the commercial market,’ and when dozens of countries pass legal bans on seal products, that affects us and it affects us more than anyone.”

 ?? , THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A scene from the documentar­y "Angry Inuk," which was crowned winner of the people’s choice award at Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival earlier this year.
, THE CANADIAN PRESS A scene from the documentar­y "Angry Inuk," which was crowned winner of the people’s choice award at Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival earlier this year.

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