New, larger resource centre for Inuit living in Winnipeg ‘makes my heart happy,’ CEO says

A  non-profit offering services for Inuit living in Winnipeg has now opened the doors of its new location for drop-ins.

Clients of the Tunngasugit Inuit Resource Centre can now go to its centre at 618 Selkirk Ave. to access everything from laundry services to computers they can use to search for housing or jobs.

Tunngasugit moved to the new 18,000-square-foot location — the former home of the Ukrainian Canadian Veterans Branch in the William Whyte neighbourhood — after receiving $1 million from the federal government.

CEO Nikki Komaksiutiksak said Thursday the centre’s previous location on Sargent Avenue was considerably smaller: about 1,200 square feet, or roughly the size of a two-bedroom house.

“I want to cry every single time I see a community member walking in and their jaws are dropping on the floor because they see the [new] space,” she said.

“They are just amazed and floored, and they just cannot believe that this space is for them.”

Banners displaying Inuktitut characters on a wall
Tunngasugit plans to roll out a full slate of community offerings come September, including workshops on sewing and other traditional crafts and Inuktitut language programming for children. (Mikaela Delos Santos/CBC)

The centre is currently open for drop-ins Mondays to Thursdays, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 

The plan is to roll out a full slate of community offerings come September, including workshops on sewing and other traditional crafts, Inuktitut language programming for children, and supports for people working toward healing and wellness.

Komaksiutiksak said up to 150 people could show up for the centre’s drop-in services on a given day.

“It’s really important for us to have a common place for Inuit to come to feel like they’re being supported,” she said.

“It just makes my heart happy to know that my community is finally being taken care of, that they’re being supported, that we are being recognized as Inuit people, as Canadians.”

Building relationships

Aleatra Sammurtok is helping conduct a survey for Tunngasugit to identify systemic barriers to services for Inuit in Manitoba.

On Thursday, she enjoyed muktuk, an Inuit delicacy of whale skin and blubber — one of the country foods provided at the centre for that day’s drop-in.

The centre “helps with all sorts of resources through getting the community together and helping Inuit families coming from the North,” Sammurtok said.

Three women with rubber gloves kneel around a fish
The centre offers Inuit country food to people who come for its drop-ins. (Mikaela Delos Santos/CBC)

“There’s a lot of Inuit that do live here in Winnipeg,” and the centre helps them find housing, health-care and transportation, she said.

Kelli Hickes-Makayak said he’s been participating in events at the centre for about four years now, having worked for Tunngasugit for one summer, helping people write resumes and doing things like mock job interviews.

Hickes-Makayak, who is set to finish Grade 12 come January, said the most important thing the centre does is reconnecting Inuit with their community.

portraits and artifacts behind a glass display
The centre is currently open for drop-ins Mondays to Thursdays, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Mikaela Delos Santos/CBC)

“In Nunavut, we gather together all the time. And now that we’re living in Winnipeg, it’s a little bit different. We’re very separated,” he said.

“I think the second-biggest thing is definitely that country food. We need that country food.”

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