'He was a visionary': Inuit leader remembered in Northern Quebec - Action News
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'He was a visionary': Inuit leader remembered in Northern Quebec

Robbie Tookalook, who died of cancer on Oct. 4, is being honoured as one of the signatories to the 1975 James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement and a key architect of Nunavik.

Robbie Tookalook helped create Air Inuit, secure Inuit land rights, found Nunavik - and still had time to hunt

Robbie Tookalook, one of the architects of Nunavik, died on Oct. 4, 2017. (Submitted by Makivik Corporation)

RobbieTookalook, an Inuit leader who was instrumental in the signing of the 1975James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreementis being remembered as one of the pillars of modern-dayNunavik.

Tookalookdied on Oct. 4,in his homevillage ofUmiujaq,on Hudson Bay.

''It was important for him to die in the north,'' said his friend Sen. Charlie Watt, who visitedTookalooka few weeks before his death.

Watt said even in hisfinal days,the 73-year-old wanted to discuss elements of the James Baytreatythat have not yet been implemented.

''That'sRobbiefor you,'' said Watt, describing him as a person who was fully committed to any issue he took on.

Defining Canadian history

TheJames Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement was the first majorland-claims agreement in Canada.

In addition to providing financial compensation for Cree and Inuit communitiesaffectedbythe massive James Bay hydroelectric development project,it defined future relations between Indigenous and non-Indigenous governments.
Robbie Tookalook signing the James Bay Northern Quebec Agreement in Quebec City in 1975. (Submitted by Makivik Corporation)

Watt remembers meetingTookalookin the early1970sinInukjuak, Que.,during the firstlegal challenge to the hydroelectric project.

Watt said hewas amazed byTookalook'sability to handle himself in a bureaucraticlegal setting, an environment that stoodin such stark contrast tohis northern community.

''He was quite energetic, active and tried his best to represent his people,'' said Watt.''He is going to missed by a lot of us.''
Robbie Tookalook (third from right) sitting with his fellow signatories of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement in Quebec City in 1975. (Submitted by Makivik Corporation)

For more than two decades,Tookalookwas a board member ofMakivikCorporation,the administrative body that now represents theNunavikInuit.

Makivik'scommunicationsco-ordinator,WilliamTagoona, whoalso metTookalookin the1970s, remembers his dedication to Indigenous peoples.

''He knewwe were being left behind, put into a corner, and he wanted to get out of that. And the only way was to speak up for yourself,'' saidTagoona.

Both men weresent to residential schools, an experience thatshapedTookalook'scommitment to Indigenous rights, saidTagoona.

''What it really taught us was to fight for what you need, to fight for what you saw was injustice.''

TagoonasaidTookalookwas overjoyed when his daughterLouisadefeated him in an election for a seat on the board of directors ofMakivik.

She also succeeded him as mayor ofUmiujaq.

''He was a firm believer in the next generation taking over,'' saidTagoona.

Tributes pour in for 'leader, teacher'

MakivikCorporation posted a tribute toTookalookon itsFacebookpage, describing him as ''agreat leader fromUmiujaq,"the village he helped build in the1980s.

Tagoonasaid he was moved to see hundreds of people respond to the post, which goes on toread,''He said it seems like he spent his whole life in politics but adds he liked the life of a hunter the most.''

Robbie Tookalook (far right), at a gala in Kuujjuaq, Que., in 2015, standing with his fellow signatories of the 1975 James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement. (Submitted by Makivik Corporation)
Tagoonasaid this was fundamental toTookalook'slife's work.
''His link to the land was really strong, and everything he did was ultimately to make it possible for his people to hunt on the land like their ancestors,'' saidTagoona.

With files from Quebec AM