
7 Nunavut bird sanctuaries have Inuktitut place names restored
Philip Manik is chair of a co-management committee in Resolute Bay, Nunavut, for the Sulukvaut area. The committee was involved in renaming the sanctuaries.
"It's very important for our culture to have the names changed to Inuktitut," he said.
The move comes as the federal government continues to work to meet its obligations under the Inuit Impact and Benefit Agreement for Nunavut.
Lisa Pirie, a manager in conservation and protected areas with Environment and Climate Change Canada, said the Inuktitut names are already how Inuit have been referring to the areas.
"We feel it's an important part of reconciliation to recognize these names," he said.
Place names were chosen by different co-management committees representing the protected areas. Those committees are made up of community members and one representative from the Canadian Wildlife Service.
The renamed sites include:
Isulijarniq, formerly Dewey Soper.
Qaqsauqtuuq, formerly East Bay.
Ikkattuaq, formerly Harry Gibbons.
Kuugaarjuk, formerly McConnell River.
Akpaqarvik, formerly Prince Leopold Island.
Ahiak, formerly Queen Maud Gulf.
Naujavaat, formerly Seymour Island.
Pirie said her department is in the process of updating the site names on its websites. She said that updating signage at the sites themselves will take a bit longer but that it's something the department is working on.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
5 hours ago
- CTV News
Garden party to raise awareness for Ottawa's new hospital
Ottawa Watch Find out how they're raising awareness and why this new facility matters to the community.


CTV News
5 hours ago
- CTV News
Morning Update: Tenants facing mass eviction
Ottawa Watch CTV Morning Live Hosts Will Aiello and Rosey Edeh have your Tuesday morning headlines.


CTV News
6 hours ago
- CTV News
Firefighters battle downtown Montreal blaze
Montreal firefighters battled a five-alarm fire in the city`s downtown area early Tuesday morning. The department was called to the building, which houses shops on the ground floor and apartments above, at the intersection of Sainte-Catherine and Towers streets at 2 a.m. More than 150 firefighters responded to the blaze, which initially started as a two-alarm fire but was quickly upgraded. 'The fire spread quickly. It's an old building from the 1900s,' Francis Fleury, section chief with the Montreal fire department, told Noovo Info. 'The fire is difficult to control, and firefighters are working hard to extinguish it.' A number of people were evacuated from the building and taken in by the Red Cross. Firefighters warn there could be ongoing outages in the area. 'The winds are causing the smoke to spread throughout the neighbourhood,' Fleury added. People are being asked to avoid the scene.