NTI receives $13.8M in federal money to revitalize Inuktut

NTI one of 12 Indigenous land claim organizations to benefit from Indigenous Languages Component

The federal government is providing funding to land-claims organizations to support Indigenous languages. (File photo)

By Arty Sarkisian

Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. is looking for proposals to distribute just under $13.8 million in federal money for Inuktut revitalization.

The purpose of the funding is to “provide and enhance opportunities for Inuit to protect, reclaim, revitalize, and maintain Inuktut that are not currently supported by government programs,” the organization’s call for proposals says.

Eligible applicants include groups or individuals enrolled under the Nunavut Agreement and Inuit not-for-profit organizations in or outside of Nunavut that could identify language programs that demonstrate “alignment” with NTI’s priorities for the funding.

There are five areas of priority: Inuktut media and arts including broadcast, film, print media, verbal and literary arts; education in early childhood, K-12, and post-secondary; language skills training, courses or professional development; community programming such as camps and celebrations; and language documentation that would record Inuit languages and history.

The funding is administered by Department of Canadian Heritage, through the Indigenous Languages Act.

The 2024 federal budget committed $225 million over five years, with $45 million ongoing to support the implementation of the act.

The federal government is providing funding directly to Indigenous Land Claim organizations so they can implement “their own language revitalization strategies,” the program overview says.

A total of 12 First Nations, Métis and Inuit Land Claim organizations received the funding, including four Inuit ones: NTI, Makivvik, Inuvialuit Regional Corp. and Nunatsiavut Government.

“Indigenous languages have seen challenges to their sustained use,” says a 2024 report by Statistics Canada based on its 2021 census.

Inuktut, a collective name for Inuktitut, Inuinnaqtun and other Inuit languages, is not an exception, with younger Inuit less likely to have it as their mother tongue, according to Statistics Canada.

Revitalizing Inuktut was one of the priorities of NTI’s four-year strategy introduced in February.

“Providing access to language funding will help us to achieve this goal,” NTI president Jeremy Tunraluk said in a news release about the new funding.

The deadline to apply to NTI’s call for proposals is May 30.

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(7) Comments:

  1. Posted by OF on

    Alaska’s North Slope borough offers free Iñupiat lessons on the online Rosetta-Stone platform. Very user friendly and easy to use. Would be great to see this type of initiative get rolled out for Inuktut.

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    • Posted by Good Use for the Money on

      I was recently searching for Inuktitut in a Rosetta-Stone format. No luck. Would be great to see NTI use this money to partner with them.

      • Posted by 867 on

        There’s the online “pirurvik” resources, which are quite dull and not at all engaging. Definitely a good opportunity for NTI to engage with the pros on this one if theyre serious, either thru Rosetta, Babel or Duolingo.

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  2. Posted by Jamesie on

    Jeez. NTI has their own money for such things. That crowd butts heads with Ottawa until there’s a pot of money to be had.

    • Posted by Colin on

      NTI has hundreds of millions in new fed funding now, for the past 4 years or so, we have no clue what NTI is doing with all this new funding and most Inuit do not even know NTI has been sitting on so much money.
      NTI needs to do better with their communication and letting the beneficiaries know what our organization is doing with all this new funding plus the funds they already have.

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  3. Posted by Northguy on

    Maybe they could spend it on this problem with Inuktitut in schools.

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    • Posted by volunteer on

      NTI is a land claims organization that has nothing to do with education. That’s the job of the Nunavut public Government! ITK is flowing the funds to the land claims as if the Nunavut Public Government were like the Nunatsiavut Aboriginal Government.
      Where’s PJ to oppose this ?? or the Education Minister?? Off with those two in the next election.

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