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Teacher wins $1M global prize for work in northern Quebec

Canadian Maggie MacDonnell has won a global teaching prize worth $1 million US for her work in Salluit, an Inuit community in northern Quebec.

Maggie MacDonnell recognized for her work in rural Salluit, Que., community

Maggie MacDonnell has has won the $1 Million US Global Teaching Prize for her work in Salluit, Que. (Marika Wheeler/CBC)

A Canadian womanhas won a global teaching prize worth $1 million US for her work in Salluit, an Inuitcommunity in northern Quebec.

Maggie MacDonnell, who grew up in Nova Scotia,beat out 20,000 other nominees for the 2017 Global Teaching Prize, which has become one of the most-coveted and high-profile awards for teaching excellence.

The prize, awarded annually by the Dubai-basedVarkeyFoundation, was established three years agoto "underline the importance of educators worldwide."

The foundationsaid in a statement MacDonnell has "made an outstanding contribution to the lives of her students and everyone in Salluit."

Teacher Maggie MacDonell (second from left) and students (left to right) Samantha Leclerc, Lucasie Amamatuak and Larry Thomassie pose in Montreal on March 14. (Kativik School Board)
Her approach focusedon emphasizing "acts of kindness," such as running a community kitchen and attending suicide prevention training.

Salluit, which hasa population of1,450,is soremote that it's accessible only by air. The tiny village witnessed six suicides in 2015, all affecting young males between the ages of 18 and 25.

"The memory that continues to haunt me is when I see these Canadian teenagers, their very own classmates of the deceased, literally digging the grave," MacDonnell said.

"I didn't know until I came to Salluit that that was a Canadian reality."

Last year, Palestinian teacher Hanan al-Hroub won for her efforts in encouraging students to renounce violence and embrace dialogue. The inaugural prize went to Nancie Atwell, an English teacher from Maine.

Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed binRashidAlMaktoumwas on hand to present the prize toMacDonnell, who made the trip for the award ceremony with several of her former students.

Her name was announced by French astronaut ThomasPesquetin a video message from the International Space Station.

Changingthe community

As a teacher,MacDonnell helped set up a fitness centre, a community kitchen and a second-hand store that benefited not only her students but also the general population, the organization said.

Maggie MacDonnell is seen here with some of her students, with whom she set up a fitness club. (Handout/Canadian Press)
She had earlier told CBC Newsshe plans to use the prize money to help "reawaken a love for the land" among Inuit youth with an environmental stewardship project.

She wantsto create a kayak program so Inuit can access the land more easily andaffordably, in an effort to counter some of the effects of colonialism.

In a statement, the local school board said it was"delighted" byMacDonnell'swin, saying itstands "not onlyas a recognition of her work atIkusikSchool,Salluit, but also as an acknowledgement of the essential work performed by all teachers."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeaualso offered his congratulations on Twitter.

MacDonnell is currentlyon a leave of absence from her teaching position while she takes a job at the KativikSchool Board for several months, managing a budget of about $500,000 to promote healthy living in all 14Nunavikcommunities.

Canada's million-dollar teacher

7 years ago
Duration 1:57
A young Canadian woman working in Quebec's Far North was chosen out 20,000 other educators for a million-dollar prize, but it's her work in rural Salluit that's most impressive.

With files from Associated Press