Georges Filotas teaching Inuktitut classes at the Montreal Children's Hospital in 2012
Photo Credit: Nunutsiak News

Helping to promote and preserve Canada’s Inuktitut northern language.

It is one of Canada’s oldest languages, and unlike many other Aboriginal languages, Inuktitut, the language spoken by the Inuit across most of Canada’s far north seems likely to survive..

George Filotas, wants to help by getting others in the southern regions also interested in what is one of the official languages of the territory of Nunavut, and the Northwest Territories, and also spoken  in the northern region of Quebec known as Nunavik.  Mr Filotas will be teaching classes in Inuktitut as a second language in Montreal this autumn.

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Mr Filotas is the first to say that others are doing much more important work to preserve and promote the learning and use of Inuktitut, but courses for non-speakers of this major aboriginal language are rare.

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Ulirnaisigutiit An Inuktitut-English Dictionary of Northern Québec, Labrador, and Eastern Arctic Dialects (with an English-Inuktitut Index). Lucien Schneider: Les Presses de l’Université Laval, 1985 © La Chose Imprimée

Through the auspices this year of Nunavik’s Avataq Cultural Institute, his courses in Montreal have been sought out but by people from a number of backgrounds seeking to learn the language, whether for business reasons, for academic purposes, or those who simply want to learn one of Canada’s original languages.

Mr Filotas notes that unlike almost many other languages, Inuktitut has very little history of being taught as a second language, and so it is still “under development” so-to-speak both as his own teaching proceeds, and as others also work on developing and improving ISL (Inuktitut as as Second Language) methods.

He notes for example, there are some Inuktitut sounds that non-speakers have difficulty re-creating, and which vary depending on the phonetics of one’s original language.

There are approximately 35,000 Inuktitut speakers across Canada, the majority in Nunavut, but also in the Northwest territories, Yukon, Nunavik –in northern Quebec, and Labrador.   

Mr Filotas feels strongly that it is important to make all efforts possible to ensure this language thrives and is passed on the future generations in order for the cohesiveness and unique culture of the Inuit to continue to exist.

AVATAQ Cultural Institute-

TUSAALANGA- internat Inuktitut learning site

* Tusaalanga means “let me hear it” in Inuktitut

 

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