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Inuit TV could be coming to screen near you, from new Inuktut-language broadcaster

Nunavut may be getting a new all-Inuktut TV channel this year. Inuit TV, which was announced on Nunavut Day, plans to have Inuktut programming in dialects from all Inuit regions, including Greenland.

Network calls on Inuit filmmakers to preserve language; elders ask for The Nature of Things in Inuktitut

Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, president of the new Inuit TV Network, is shown in a file photo. The broadcaster plans to launch its Inuktut-language station this year.

Nunavut may begetting a newall-Inuktut TV channel this year.

Inuit TV plans to have Inuktut programming in dialects from all Inuit regions, including Greenland, saidAlethea Arnaquq-Baril, president of thenew broadcaster, Inuit TV Network.Inuktutis a term used to encompass all Inuit languages, including Inuktitut.

"Many Inuit homes don't have computers or good internet access. We saw the need for a conventional broadcaster. We just simply haven't been getting enough Inuktut content on CBC and APTN," she said.

"This educational broadcaster will make it easier to be able to show more Inuktut content in Inuit homes."

They've filed paperwork with theCanadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission,Arnaquq-Barilsaid. The Inuit TV Network is planning occasional programming for this yearand full-time programming in 2021.

"We will be starving for content at first," Arnaquq-Barilsaid.

Focused on culturaland language education, the network wouldbe a place for Inuit filmmakers to show their work. It wouldalso run content from other production companies, such asthe Inuit Broadcasting Corporation.

Arnaquq-Baril said at a newsconference thatthe channel will likely air on a conventional television station in Nunavut. It wouldalso have a channel on Isuma.tv, a Nunavut-basedwebsite for Indigenous media art. But, she saiddetails around launch and distribution are still in the works.

Announced on Thursday for Nunavut Day, the networkis being funded by $2.4 million over the next three years fromNunavut Tunngavik Inc., the organization that represents Inuit in the territory.

Writer-director Nyla Innuksuk filmed Slash Back, a feature about an alien invasion, in Pangnirtung, Nunavut, in 2019. The new Inuit TV Network wants to show original content from Inuit regions. (Guy Godfrey)

Mainstream shows, Nunavut-made films

The station's goal is "to strengthen Inuktut, Inuit culture and identity and access to information in Inuktut, the majority language of the territory," Nunavut Tunngavik said in a news release on Thursday.

"Television viewing, even for very small children, is considered one of many ways to support literacy development," the joint news release said. "Currently, there is a lack of Inuktut programming on Nunavut television to balance the daily influence of Western culture and language."

A content committee will determine what kind of programming viewerswant,Arnaquq-Barilsaid.

For children, shesaid, translating mainstream children's shows like Spider-Man and Dora the Explorer can be a "powerful way to preserve language."

Elders, who contributed to planning for the station, had their own ideas, too.

"One of the biggest requests we got from elders is that they wanted to see David Suzuki's The Nature of Thingsin Inuktitut. They really want to know what he was saying," she said.

A filmmaker herself, Arnaquq-Baril said it can be challenging to find a platform to share Nunavut-made films within the territory.

"We want to support and encourage as much original content in our language as possible."

She said first-time filmmakers can access funding through organizationssuch asthe Nunavut Film Development Corp.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story incorrectly said the funding for the Inuit TV Network is coming from the Nunavut Tunngavik Foundation. In fact, it's coming from Nunavut Tunngavik Inc.
    Jul 10, 2020 9:19 AM CT