Simeonie Keenainak Explained

Simeonie Keenainak is an Inuit accordionist and retired RCMP officer from Pangnirtung, Nunavut, Canada. He is also a photographer, teacher and hunter.[1] He has performed at the Pangnirtung Music Festival and was featured in regional and national media for his musicianship and cultural community efforts.

Early life

Keenainak was born about 60 kilometres north of Pangnirtung.[2] Growing up, he learned traditional hunting skills.[3]

Career

Keenainak began acting as a guide for the RCMP, and later became a constable. He also performed around the north on the accordion; in 1996 he participated in the CBC's Inuit Button Accordion Festival.[4]

After retiring from the police force, Keenainak worked as a high school shop teacher,[5] began teaching traditional skills to young people,[6] and became involved in nature photography.[7] He continued to hunt and to play on the accordion, including a 2012 performance with the National Arts Centre Orchestra.[8]

A 2012 short documentary about Inuit music, Inngiruti - The Thing that Sings!, in which Keenainak performs and is interviewed, was filmed by Nyla Innuksuk through the National Film Board.[9]

In 2019 he represented the local hunters' association at hearings about oil and gas development in the arctic.

Personal

Simeonie and Daisy Keenainak have been married since 1967.

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://nunatsiaq.com/stories/article/hearings-underway-on-potential-oil-and-gas-work-in-eastern-nunavut-waters/ "Hearings underway on potential oil and gas work in eastern Nunavut waters"
  2. http://www.ottawacitizen.com/news/NACO+North+This+former+Mountie+always+hits+right+note/7465431/story.html "NACO in the North: This former Mountie always hits the right note"
  3. https://www.rcinet.ca/eye-on-the-arctic/2013/08/07/pangnirtung-nunavut-lands-its-bowhead-whale/ "Pangnirtung, Nunavut lands its bowhead whale"
  4. http://cfmb.icaap.org/content/34.1-2/BV34.1&2art7.pdf Canadian Folk Music Bulletin: Inuit Accordion Music-A Better Kept Secret
  5. https://www.duluthnewstribune.com/news/2362767-inuits-say-climate-change-impacts-their-way-life " say climate change impacts their way of life"
  6. https://www.pressreader.com › canada › ottawa-citizen "Life in Limbo"
  7. Mirror Writing: (re-)constructions of Native American Identity. Galda & Wilch; 2000. . p. 260.
  8. Sarah Jennings. Art and Politics: The History of the National Arts Centre, Second Edition. MQUP; 17 October 2019. . p. 399.
  9. http://gimmesometruth.ca/stories-land "Stories from Our Land"