Child-care centre offers culturally relevant education to Ottawa's Inuit youth - Action News
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Ottawa

Child-care centre offers culturally relevant education to Ottawa's Inuit youth

The Pirurviapikchild-care centre, meaning'a place to grow' in Inuktitut, will operate year-round out of a dedicated space at Rideau High School in Ottawa's Vanier neighbourhood.

Pirurviapik can accommodate up to 49 children aged 6 months to 5 years

Laetitia Amaroalik Cant and her adoptive mother Natasha Cant play with a drum at an open house for Pirurviapik, a new child-care space in Ottawa opened by the Inuuqatiqiit Centre. (Ben Andrews/CBC News)

A new child-care centre designed to deliver culturally relevant early childhood education for Ottawa's large Inuit community is opening.

Pirurviapik, meaning"a place to grow" in Inuktitut, will operate year-round out of a dedicated space at Rideau High School in the city'sVanier neighbourhood.

Operated by the Inuuqatigiit Centre, an Ottawa-based Inuit cultural organization, the new child-care space can accommodate up to 49 Inuit children from six months to five years of age. That total will include 10 infants,15 toddlers and 24 pre-school students.

"The Inuit culture has tried to survive in an urban setting," said Stephanie Mikki Adams, the centre's executive director, at an open house Saturday.

"Ensuring that our children still have the knowledge and capability to speak, write and understand Inuktitut is very important to ensure that our culture and language thrives."

From left to right: Kathleen Jadan, Stephanie Mikki Adams and Heather Ochaulski. (Ben Andrews/CBC News)

The centre took three years to complete, according to a press release from the Inuuqatigiit Centre, and includeda renovation of the Rideau High School space to fitInuit design elements.

The $1 million renovation was funded by the City of Ottawa, the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board and the province of Ontario.

Largest Inuit population outside Nunavut

Statistics Canada estimates Ottawa's Inuit population at around 1,800, but that number is likely a significant underrepresentation.

Inuit health agencies in Ottawa estimate the true number to be thousands more, and around 6,000 Inuit are registered with the Ottawa-based Akausivik Inuit Family Health Team.

Heather Ochalski, director of early learning at Pirurviapik, said the new centre helps meet the needs ofInuit youth by immersing them in an environment where caregivers speak Inuktitut and by supplying them with culturally significant toys and games.

"It's part of identity development," she said. "It shows us where we come from, our kinships, our history, and where we are going as Inuit in contemporary Canada."

Elder Elisapee Birmingham lit the qulliq, a culturally significant oil lamp, at the ribbon-cutting ceremony Saturday. (Ben Andrews/CBC News)

'Cultural revitalization'

Natasha Cant praised the program for giving her adopted daughters, Laetitia Amaroalik Cant and Giselle Amitnaaq Cant, a place to learn about their language and culture.

"There's such a great cultural revitalization," she said. "It makes them very proud of who they are and their culture."

Adams said the program responds to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's 12th call to action, which recommends thedevelopment of"culturally appropriate early childhood education programs" for Indigenous families.

"Serving a child means serving a family," Adams said.