Isuarsivik recovery centre celebrates 30 years with plans to grow

Director hopes to eventually offer programming across Nunavik

The Isuarsivik Regional Recovery Centre, which moved into a new building in 2023, is celebrating 30 years this year. (Photo by Cedric Gallant)

By Cedric Gallant - Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

The Isuarsivik Regional Recovery Centre is celebrating 30 years this year with a mural and ambitions to expand across Nunavik.

“To be able to say that we have the experience, we have the know-how, is very helpful,” said Etua Snowball, director general of the centre, in an interview about the milestone.

“When we ask for funding from the ministry, funding agents, or whoever it may be, [it is helpful] because we do have that experience now.”

Isuarsivik offers culturally attuned programming for Nunavimmiut dealing with addiction.

Snowball said he hopes the process of painting a mural on Isuarsivik’s building will begin by this summer. Appearing on the wall facing the parking lot, the piece, made by Inuit artists, will show the history of the centre and feature people who have been involved throughout the process.

Isuarsivik is also working on a 30-year detailed timeline of its evolution over the years. As of now, its website presents a small chronological section that goes through Isuarsivik’s history.

In the 1990s, people in Nunavik received addiction-related services through the Quebec government at Pavillon Foster in Montreal, which is still open to this day.

Isuarsivik was created in 1995 through the joint efforts of Makivvik Corp. and Johnny Adams, who was Kuujjuaq’s mayor at the time. At first, the centre only offered its services to Kuujjuammiut.

The path from creation to where Isuarsivik stands today took “dedication and resilience,” Snowball said.

“When you see the need, you go forth and find the solutions. Until we do, we keep going.”

Isuarsivik moved into a new 22-bed home in 2023. The people who come there, who staff refer to as guests, stay for treatment programs that run in cycles. The first cycle was completed in spring 2023, and staff are now into their sixth cycle.

Snowball said it is going well, but “we are on a learning curve.”

Because staff are trying different scenarios with different guests, they adapt to the various conditions each cycle. The current batch are single-parent families, for example.

“We learn from them and find solutions for every aspect of who we have as guests,” Snowball said.

He added he hopes to see Isuarsivik in all Nunavik communities over the next 30 years, and possibly into other Inuit regions.

“This definitely could be a possibility,” Snowball said.

 

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(2) Comments:

  1. Posted by Really? on

    In the 30 years that this rehabilitation program has been operational, how many of your “clients” has stayed sober in those 30 years? Is it just alcoholics “guests” who enter this program? Are drug addicts “guests” permitted to go through this program? Does this program just suggest that ‘guests” with alcohol related problems allowed to enter this program? Or does the counsellors see and notice that alcohol and or drugs do cause the same emotional blockage of trauma? Or do they believe that the drug addicts “guests” still can use and abuse medicinal drugs such as marijuana and or hashish? Since alcohol and drugs do the same thing to allow the alcoholic and drug addict not to feel traumatic emotions that a drug addict and alcoholic has to go through in order to stay sober, do your program allow your counsellors to use these mind altering drugs? If the rehabilitation program is there to change one’s perspective in life and to help change their behaviors dont you think or believe that allowing your “guests” to use medicinal drugs is a program for failure?
    Just my thoughts on how one’s sobriety is looked at.

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  2. Posted by Esquimau Joe©️ on

    My girlfriend told me that there is no such thing as problems, only opportunities.

    I thought, That’s great. Well I have a serious drinking opportunity.🤑

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