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Ungava Inuit (New Québec Inuit) live along the shores of Ungava Bay, on the south shore of HUDSON STRAIT and on the eastern coast of HUDSON BAY. They exploit the resources of the vast area north of the treeline, especially sea mammals in the coastal waters, and also move inland to hunt caribou and at times penetrate the traditional CREE and MONTAGNAIS-NASKAPI lands south of the treeline.


Keywords
Native Tribes


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Canada's Native Peoples

The term Ungava, meaning "towards the open water," was used to designate the Inuit band established at the mouth of the Arnaud (Payne) River. The Moravian Brothers, who established missions among LABRADOR INUIT, called the Inuit lands located to the west "Ungava"; the HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY used the name widely in the 19th century, and the federal government then created the federal district of Ungava in 1895. Previously, these Inuit had no generic terms for themselves.

Culturally close to the Inuit southeast of Baffin Island and to the Labrador Inuit, they nevertheless differ from these tribes in a number of linguistic and technological respects and in their social and religious customs. The distinctions have been accentuated by the acculturation and evolution of these Inuit as a result of the administrative division of their lands.

The Inuit of the northern part of Ungava from Cape Smith to Killiniq Islands hunted large sea mammals (arctic whale, walrus, belugas, bearded seals), had good transportation (UMIAK, kayak, dog teams), and lived in large, warm IGLOOs built of snow; they had access to all coastal and inland resources; those in the southern reaches of Ungava lived on fish and small marine or land mammals. Archaeological remains and their oral history show that some bands lived permanently on the shores of the larger inland lakes (eg, Payne, Klotz and Nantais lakes) or on the coastal islands and archipelagos (Ottawa, Sleeper, Mansel and Nottingham Islands).

Among the first Inuit in Canada to establish permanent contacts with Europeans, the Ungava were also the first to take charge of the administration and management of their development through INUIT CO-OPERATIVES and the JAMES BAY AGREEMENT; they also became renowned for the fine quality and abundance of their contemporary art (see INUIT ART). Though influenced by a strong SHAMAN tradition, they were Christianized by Wesleyan, Anglican and later Roman Catholic missionaries. A number of syncretic and messianic movements also marked their development.

During the 1970s a dissident political movement opposed to the James Bay Agreement grew in the northwestern Ungava region. Two writers, Mitiarjuk de Kangirsujuaq (Wakeham Bay), author of the novel Sanaaq, and Thomassie Qumak of Povungnituk, author of an encyclopedia and an Inuit dictionary, have been instrumental in spreading Inuit culture through the written word.

See also INUIT MYTH AND LEGEND; NATIVE PEOPLE: ARCTIC and general articles under NATIVE PEOPLE.


Kayak and Umiak
The kayak is a narrow hunting boat made of sealskin stretched over a wood or bone frame. The larger umiak was used for transporting goods and people (artwork by Gordon Miller).

Author B. SALADIN-D'ANGLURE AND J. GARTH TAYLOR


Suggested Reading
N. Graburn, Eskimo without Igloos (1969); L. Turner, The Ethnology of the Ungava District (1894, new ed 1979); M. Vézinet, Les Nunamiut: Inuit au coeur des terres (1980).


Links to Other Sites
Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples
The website for the "Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples." Click on the links for feature articles about Canada's many multicultural communities, access to their extensive digital archives collection, learning modules, and much more. From "Multicultural Canada."

Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami
Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ITK) is the national Inuit organization in Canada. Represents four Inuit regions – Nunatsiavut (Labrador), Nunavik (northern Quebec), Nunavut, and the Inuvialuit Settlement Region in the Northwest Territories. Their extensive website covers regional political, economic, cultural, and environmental issues. Also offers online articles from the magazine "Inuktitut" in Inuktitut, English, and French.

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