Helen Maksagak Explained

Helen Maksagak
Birth Date:15 April 1931
Birth Place:Bernard Harbour, Northwest Territories (now Nunavut)
Death Place:Cambridge Bay, Nunavut
Residence:Cambridge Bay, Nunavut
Office:1st Commissioner of Nunavut
Term Start:April 1, 1999
Term End:April 1, 2000
Successor:Peter Irniq
Primeminister:Jean Chrétien
Premier:Paul Okalik
Term Start2:January 16, 1995
Term End2:March 26, 1999
Predecessor2:Daniel L. Norris
Successor2:Daniel Joseph Marion
Primeminister2:Jean Chrétien
Premier2:Nellie J. Cournoyea
Don Morin
Jim Antoine

Helen Mamayaok Maksagak, (April 15, 1931  - January 23, 2009) was a Canadian politician. She served as the commissioner of the Northwest Territories from January 16, 1995, until March 26, 1999, and as the first commissioner of Nunavut from April 1, 1999, until April 1, 2000. She is a notable Copper Inuk.[1] [2] Born on the land near Bernard Harbour in the Canadian Western Arctic, Maksagak was raised in Tuktoyaktuk, Aklavik and the Bathurst Inlet area and eventually settled in Cambridge Bay to raise a family of six surviving children with her husband, John Sr. Together, they were stalwart supporters of the growing indigenous rights movement in the Canadian north. Their home was often a stopping place and site of discussions when young Inuit involved in negotiating the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement or participating in Northwest Territories political life passed through the community.

Maksagak was appointed Deputy Commissioner of the Northwest Territories in 1992. In 1995, she was appointed Commissioner, partially in anticipation of the pending creation of the territory of Nunavut in 1999. She was the first woman and the first Inuk to hold the office. In April 1999, she transferred her office to the new Nunavut Territory and continued to provide stability to the new government in transition. She served until April 2000 as the first commissioner of the newly created territory of Nunavut and then as Assistant Commissioner of Nunavut from 2005 until she died in 2009.

Helen Maksagak was appointed as a member of the Order of Canada in May 2003.[3] She served as a member of the Qulliit (Nunavut) Status of Women Council and as an Elder for the Aboriginal Healing Foundation.

Maksagak died on January 23, 2009, at 77.[4] Helen Maksagak Drive in Iqaluit is named in her memory.

Arms

Escutcheon:Purpure an Inukshuk of six stones Or.
Crest:A demi Inuk woman wearing an atigi styled in the manner of the Inuvialuit people Proper her dexter hand resting on an Inuit ulu Or.
Motto:Apkutikson Nalunaikniagiga (I Will Show The Way)
Notes:Granted 4 June 1996.[5]
Supporters:On a bank of snow Argent above barry wavy of three Azure Argent and Azure dexter a caribou Or gorged with a collar of mountain avens Proper sinister an arctic wolf Or gorged with a like collar.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Helen Mamayaok Maksagak . Library and Archives Canada. April 30, 2020.
  2. Web site: Backgrounder - Biography of Mrs. Helen Maksagak - Nunavut Deputy Commissioner . About INAC > Media Room > 2005 News Releases > . Indian and Northern Affairs Canada . 2008-11-04 . 2009-10-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20120402184331/http://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/aiarch/mr/nr/s-d2005/02732bk-eng.asp. 2012-04-02.
  3. http://www.nnsl.com/frames/newspapers/2003-06/jun23_03hel.html What an honour
  4. News: Helen Maksagak, Nunavut's first commissioner, dies at 77 . 26 October 2023.
  5. Web site: Helen Mamayaok Maksagak . 12 October 2023 . Canadian Heraldic Authority.