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Growing Up In Cambridge Bay 

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'Growing Up in Cambridge Bay' charts the experiences and lives of local youth in Cambridge Bay in the Arctic Circle. They document traditional fishing, hunting, Arctic sports, local legends on the origin of death and musical traditions such as throat singing.
Community elders from Cambridge Bay also perform drum dances and discuss their perspectives on a rapidly changing future for the community and their way of life. Their next video documents building a traditional kayak alongside their elders.
This film was made during a Participatory Video project undertaken by InsightShare as part of Conversations with the Earth (CWE) - a partnership through which InsightShare works with Indigenous communities to identify, train, and equip local videographers to enable them to record the impacts of, and responses to, climate change at the local level. Creating and sharing these video stories enables Indigenous peoples to contemplate and present their own perspectives on the effects of climate change to inform the global discourse. This has also created an opportunity to share local adaptation strategies and build donor support for community-based adaptation. Indigenous videographers are training people from other communities, helping to create a regional and a global network of Indigenous communities working on these issues. Communities participating in CWE are creating their own media and linking up through the emerging media hub network.
Facilitated by InsightShare, May 2009
For more information:
www.insightshare.org
www.conversationsearth.org

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8 дек 2010

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Комментарии : 15   
@Creashone
@Creashone 5 лет назад
Great video. A leadership group and I visited more than 20 years ago. Thank you for everything, people of Cambridge Bay. Big hugs.
@Zwikster
@Zwikster 13 лет назад
I lived here in this wonderful community for 2 years. Very well done video! Thank you!!
@KizanTM
@KizanTM 6 лет назад
Glad you're out there.
@satvinderbagh9864
@satvinderbagh9864 10 лет назад
Excellent piece of film truely remarkable people. I would love to visit the true Canada one day.
@DoubleAAmazin3
@DoubleAAmazin3 5 месяцев назад
them girls were spittin bars
@richardarances7883
@richardarances7883 3 года назад
nothing but respect to this people
@MrKylecardinal
@MrKylecardinal 9 лет назад
I grew up in Cambridge, My Father worked for Fred Ross,I lived up by the barracks.Been 25 yrs tho
@jodycardinal2132
@jodycardinal2132 2 года назад
So did I and my father worked for Fred also. That’s crazy
@bobcarveth4641
@bobcarveth4641 7 лет назад
so that's what Killinik high school looks like, Donated a bit of gear to this place Uncle Bob
@rayne95sato
@rayne95sato 3 года назад
Oh my gosh my cousins!
@greatestever184
@greatestever184 7 лет назад
I want one of those fur coats and the boots stuff. It gets pretty cold where I am from and I think that would be beneficial to me. Where can I acquire such things? If it keeps them warm in that weather, it's sure to keep me warm in our 20 degree winters.
@EbutEm
@EbutEm 5 лет назад
Fascinating learning about places and cultures further off the grid. The natives they look very asian in variations but not too eskimo. Not a ton going on up there but life looks simpler and happy and very family, culture and community oriented. I wanna learn more!
@sgtsarge2617
@sgtsarge2617 3 года назад
Cambridge bay was one of the nicer places i visited, except the week ends drunk that come by plane just to get wasted, it was really nice.
@espadaization
@espadaization 11 лет назад
not they don't i should know i lived up there