I remember my well intentioned grade 6 teacher Mr. Blue, who
always smelled wonderfully of pipe tobacco after our recess breaks, making an
important announcement one day about a new student coming to class. He made a
point of encouraging us kids to be welcoming and went on to discuss that the
student, who’s name if I recall correctly, was Dean, was black. Yes, his skin
colour spawned this discussion. It was
the 70’s after all and my hometown was in the heart of white bread Canada. The
end of the discussion came with a firm warning that discrimination would not be
tolerated. It seems almost humorous now.
I recall Dean being readily accepted, not because of this discussion, but
because he was willing to play games at recess. Valuing diversity was not an
issue for children to wrestle with.
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| Photo by Eli Lacourse: a talented young photographer from Stratford |
I am steeped in a small towns’ culture.
I am also an
outgoing guy. Anyone who has spent time with me will pretty soon realize that I make friends quickly and easily. I don’t shy from social
situations and I give my attention readily. So granting all of this, given that I
harbor, nor tolerate any discrimination against others, granting that I learned
manners and hospitality growing up, given that I practice it and am a social
creature I was fully prepared, nay suited for this move to a remote Northern
community right? Wrong.
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| Photo by Eli LaCouse: a talented young photographer from Stratford |
Six months in and taking stock of my connectedness to this
community I have to make the realistic assessment that I have not connected very
deeply with the people in this hamlet I call home. It is not through lack of
trying. I participate where I can in community events. I volunteer and make
myself available to others just as I have always done. But the outcomes have
not been the same. Don’t get me wrong. I have come to know many people in the
community, enough so that it is hard for me to remember all their names although admittedly I have poor skills in remembering names generally. I have
even had some social invitations although I have learned that plans change in the moment and being stood up is a far more frequent experience than follow through.
It’s a cultural trait where immediacy
takes precedence over future planning. There
are a group of other transplants to this community, “Mola” (the North Slavey word for white
folk and often used as a pejorative), who will include me in their infrequent social
activities. I am not utterly alone. And
I will say that Jean and Dennis, who are also new to the community, have been
immensely helpful to me as I stumble through this experience and they share
their own personal struggles and perplexity even after years of living in Northern Communities.
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| Photo by Morris Neyelle who lives in Deline and I think is part of the fabric of the place |
But this is a blog and not a history exposition. And my
experience is present and not past. And I live here amongst the Dene, I am not
a visitor bringing gifts or novelties but we all know how this story is going to end as someday I will leave too.
The ice road is open and is carrying the stream of
transport trucks that keep the community fed and powered will begin crossing
the 10 km stretch across Great Bear Lake. A few trucks have made the journey. I helped at the grocery store on a bright and bitterly cold Sunday to unload the first of the trucks and found it somewhat humorous that the first 1/2 dozen skids off the truck were the years supply of toilet paper. Furniture and cases and cases of pop made up the rest of the load. More pop than furniture as the North is addicted to softdrinks.
The community is at times very quiet
as many people make the journey on the winter road in their vehicles, the ubiquitous pickup truck,
to Yellowknife to visit, to shop and to simply get away from the community for
a while. Neighboring communities such as Tulita and Norman Wells are other
destinations. Bootleggers travel the winter road to Norman Wells and back with boxes
of liquor as a mickey of vodka (the preferred fuel of drinkers in the North)
will net 100 dollars in a community which has no place to purchase liquor and
quantities allowed are strictly limited. Funny that everyone, and I mean even
grade school children in the town knows who the folks are that bootleg booze
in but despite public outcry over the damaging social effects of alcohol abuse in the
community and many outspoken people who state that bootleggers should be caught
and charged there are relatively few seizures of bootlegged liquor. Prohibition, which is actually just limits on amounts of alcohol one can possess has been a failed measure in stemming the Smirnoff tide that washes over this community leaving damaged people, at its worst children, in its wake. Still the prohibitionist continue to insist that their is the only way to combat alcohol abuse in the community.
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| 400 dollars worth of booze and common trash |
The community is at times very quiet
as many people make the journey on the winter road in their vehicles, the ubiquitous pickup truck,
to Yellowknife to visit, to shop and to simply get away from the community for
a while. Neighboring communities such as Tulita and Norman Wells are other
destinations. Bootleggers travel the winter road to Norman Wells and back with boxes
of liquor as a mickey of vodka (the preferred fuel of drinkers in the North)
will net 100 dollars in a community which has no place to purchase liquor and
quantities allowed are strictly limited. Funny that everyone, and I mean even
grade school children in the town knows who the folks are that bootleg booze
in but despite public outcry over the damaging social effects of alcohol abuse in the
community and many outspoken people who state that bootleggers should be caught
and charged there are relatively few seizures of bootlegged liquor. Prohibition, which is actually just limits on amounts of alcohol one can possess has been a failed measure in stemming the Smirnoff tide that washes over this community leaving damaged people, at its worst children, in its wake. Still the prohibitionist continue to insist that their is the only way to combat alcohol abuse in the community.I took a journey on the ice road a few weeks back by skidoo before much of the traffic started. It was a beautiful Saturday morning when I left Délįne and headed out across the ice. A fresh layer of snow had fallen and the undulations in the ice provided lift when you hit them at speed. The ice road is a stretch across Great Bear lake and crossing it is as close to being in a desert as I have yet to experience in my life. It is flat and barren and cold but provides wonderful views of the town if you stop long enough to turn and look and maybe snap a photo or two. Once off the lake the road, which is really just a cleared patch of ground follows the Great Bear River as it winds for 95km more before connecting with the main winter road leading North along the Mackenzie River through Tulita and to my destination of Norman Wells. This road was part of the infrastructure for the now defunct Northern Territories Company Limited and served as a part of the sealift and barge order trade to the Délįne
After reaching the main junction where the Deline winter side road meets the main winter road my travels turned from West to North and the road widened significantly. I arrived in the village of Tulita, where the rivers of Bear
and Mackenzie meet. I warmed up here with a coffee and a walk about the Northern Store while I waited for the gas depot to open for it's Saturday hour (yes,hour) of operation. It was a balmy -19°c with a wind chill of -30°c and I can only guess at the temperature my wrapped and goggled face was being blown whilst riding the skidoo. I'll happily report before my family panic in reading this that I was so well mummified in my gear that only a dime sized portion of the bridge of my nose got frost bite and even then it was only first degree. Ok, maybe second.At Tulita the landscape changes utterly. The winter road winds beside the Mackenzie river for another 20 km or so before it turns into the village of Tulita (where the waters meet).Here are the foothills of the Mackenzie Mountain Range which runs North-South. This is the country of Dall's Sheep and mountain goats. The road is rough and graded on a steep angle at times making speed a relative issue. Skis tend to slip along these stretches. Even frozen and barren I can imagine the grandeur of this trip and hope to have an opportunity to canoe along this same route when the ice is off the river.
While the journey was some 260 km one way the time flew by quickly. I was rewarded by dinner with some colleagues who graciously provided me with a bed for the night. A beer and burger served to you is a big treat nowadays.
The return journey was full of more magnificent scenery and I took many opportunities to stop along the route. A thermos of coffee and binoculars kept me happily occupied for the day. Gas ran quite low toward the end of my journey and at one point about 20km from Délįne I realized that there was a real possibility that the skidoo might not make it back to town. There was a moment of palpable anxiety created by this thought. I was alone. I had not come unprepared and I was sure that cell reception was not far off but I recognized that I was alone. It's a frequent reality that I am quickly having to adjust to.
Clearly I made it back else this entry would not have been written. Perhaps for the reader this is a less than engaging entry. Looking back over what I've written for this month I recognize that I have struggled with how to describe and share this understanding that I am coming to. What is to be learned from it and how I will ever be able to write about that is a question for another day. Stay warm.





We, however, ARE friends, and this we cherish.
ReplyDeletexo
ReplyDelete~m
Thank you for sharing tender moments. And wonder.
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