Atii Angutiit brings men together for activities with the aim of suicide prevention
NunatsiaqNews: A program called Atii Angutiit has made its way through the High Arctic, with the goal of helping men gather and interact in the name of suicide prevention.
“The reception has been great,” said Sam Tutanuak, senior adviser with the Department of Health. “It’s been well received in the communities.”
Tutanuak’s role is focused on how to reduce suicide rates among the male population of Nunavut. He’s one of six members of the Atii Angutiit team. The other members are Nunavut rapper Hyper-T, Jennifer Wakegijig, Patrick Beland, Joe Hadfield and Sikati Kusugak.
Atii Angutiit provides men a space to bond and have conversations about difficult topics during two-day community gatherings.
This September, the program went to Grise Fiord, Resolute Bay, Pond Inlet and Arctic Bay. Tutanuak says attendance was great, ranging between 20 to 70 people, with Pond Inlet bringing one of the bigger crowds.
“Addressing the losses that we’ve had in Nunavut from suicide was heavy,” Tutanuak said. “There was a lot of nails pounded on the boards in all the communities we went to.”
After that, the program pivots to more energetic exercises and events, like performances by Nunavut artists like Hyper-T, a young rapper from Chesterfield Inlet. With Hyper-T in the program, Tutanuak said he hopes more youth will attend.
There were plans for Atii Angutiit to also go to Clyde River this fall, but the group was not able to make it as planned, Tutanuak said. But he emphasized he and his team will find another date to make it there. It’s part of a bigger goal, to take Atii Angutiit to every Nunavut community.
“Our team looks forward to going to the communities we haven’t been to yet,” Tutanuak said.