Santa Fe New Mexican

Santa visit brings joy to frosty Alaska Inupiat village

Alaska Air National Guard delivers Santa, Mrs. Claus and gifts to remote village

- By Mark Thiessen

NUIQSUT, Alaska — Though the weather outside was frightful, schoolchil­dren in the northern Alaska Inupiat community of Nuiqsut were so delighted for a visit by Santa that they braved wind chills of 25 degrees below zero just to see him land on a snow-covered airstrip.

Once again, it was time for Operation Santa Claus in Alaska. And here in Nuiqsut, a roadless village of about 460 residents on Alaska’s oil-rich North Slope, the temperatur­es may have been plunging, but the children were warming quickly.

Never mind that Santa left Rudolph at home to catch a ride on an Alaska Air National Guard cargo plane to Nuiqsut, just 30 frosty miles south of the Arctic Ocean.

Here, just a reindeer skip and a hop from the North Pole, the students were abuzz with good cheer.

“Some of them were out on the deck, and they were jumping up and down, excited to see the plane coming in,” said Principal Lee Karasiewic­z of the Trapper School, as he kept watch over pupils from the 160-student K-12 facility privileged to get a pre-Christmas visit from the jolly, fat one.

“They knew right away by the size of the plane, who was on that plane,” Karasiewic­z said of the students.

When Santa and Mrs. Claus stepped off the hulking cargo plane, some of the children rushed to greet him with hugs, their beaming parents snapping photos on their phones.

Year after year across the decades, the Alaska National Guard has delivered gifts, supplies and often Christmas itself to a few tiny rural Alaska communitie­s, trying in particular to make things merry in villages hit by recent hardships.

Operation Santa Claus began in 1956 when residents of one community, St. Mary’s, stung by flooding and then a drought that wiped out their subsistenc­e hunting and fishing opportunit­iesm, were forced to spend Christmas money on food instead. The guard stepped in, bringing them donated gifts and supplies.

For Nuiqsut, the adversity came last spring when an oil production facility about 7 miles from town sprang a natural gas leak. Though oil workers evacuated, there was no mandatory evacuation in Nuiqsut even though the community was put on alert, said Rosemary Ahtuangaru­ak, the town’s mayor.

Subsequent­ly, she said, some people began experienci­ng symptoms related to gas exposure, such as headaches or trouble breathing. About 20 families, including some with pregnant women or elders and others with special medical conditions, decided to self-evacuate.

Long accustomed to helping out in disasters, the guard sent its tribal liaison official to the town after the leak was contained. The official spoke with community members and relayed their concerns back to guard leadership.

The Santa event held the last Tuesday in November was “a wonderful opportunit­y” to show children the guard in a different light — not always coming around just when there’s trouble, Ahtuangaru­ak said.

“It’s about bringing in the National Guard in a non-stressful event so the kids could see them doing good work that’s not during a scary event,” she said.

While there were a few puzzled faces of children sitting on Santa’s lap for the first time, there was nothing frightenin­g about the visit — and certainly no lists of who was naughty or nice.

Once all had gathered in the school gym, each child had the opportunit­y for a short visit with Santa and Mrs. Claus, and each received a backpack brimming with snacks and books, hygiene supplies and a gift.

Qannik Amy Alice Woods, a second grader, didn’t want to open her backpack just yet. This was her first experience with Santa Claus, but he won her over like every other child in the world.

“He’s cool,” she said, flashing two thumbs up before heading to the bleachers to enjoy a fresh banana, a hard-tofind item above the Arctic Circle. The Alaska National Guard delivered more than 1,400 pounds of gifts for the children of Nuiqsut. For the last 53 years, the program has been conducted in conjunctio­n with the Salvation Army.

Minto received about 650 pounds of gifts for about 65 children, and Scammon Bay got nearly 1,800 pounds of gifts for 325 or so children.

At the end of the last song, a beaming Mrs. Claus grabbed one of the dancers and hugged her tightly.

““We can’t go to all of our villages, but when we have a village celebrate this opportunit­y, it’s a celebratio­n that transfers through the tundra drums across our state,” Mayor Ahtuangaru­ak said.

 ?? MARK THIESSEN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Santa and Mrs. Claus stand with a child who greeted them after they landed Nov. 29, 2022, in Nuiqust, Alaska. Operation Santa Claus, the Alaska National Guard’s outreach program, attempts to bring Santa and Mrs. Claus and gifts
MARK THIESSEN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Santa and Mrs. Claus stand with a child who greeted them after they landed Nov. 29, 2022, in Nuiqust, Alaska. Operation Santa Claus, the Alaska National Guard’s outreach program, attempts to bring Santa and Mrs. Claus and gifts

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