Broadcasting 'from outside': Inuvialuktun language show returns to the air

Last Thursday, it was –19 C in Edmonton and –26 in Inuvik, N.W.T. Either way, it was cold and CBC Radio's Dodie Malegana was using that fact for a lesson in how to speak Inuvialuktun, the endangered languages of Canada's North.

"Ah-lah-uppah. It's cold. Kick-cow-rook. It's cold," Dodie Malegana said over the airwaves on Thursday, giving the proper pronounciation for alappaa and qiqaur̂uq.

Malegana and CBC Radio One have revived Tusaavik, the Inuvialuktun language program that started in 1982.

The program went on hiatus in 2017 when she moved from Whitehorse to Edmonton to work on another job with an audio Indigenous archiving project.

As the show's host, Malegana, who grew up in Aklavik, a small N.W.T hamlet southwest of Inuvik, speaks in the Indigenous language to offer listeners interviews, music, announcements, weather, news and archival tape from elders.

But there is one key change. Malegana now is broadcasting from CBC's studios in Edmonton — or, as her listeners would call it "from outside."

Ariel Fournier
Ariel Fournier

"It's the nervousness of starting all over again," said Malegana, calling the return to the airways "nerve-wracking but exciting."

But she quickly warmed up to returning to the program playing upbeat songs like "Have Some Tea" by Inuit musicians Uniaqtut.

Malegana said she created simplified snippets of language lessons when she reintroduced the program because she felt it was important to teach more fans of the show the language.

"I often have listeners that don't understand the language but they enjoy it," she said.

Currently, around 20 per cent of Inuvialuit are fluent in the Indigeneous language of Inuvialuktun.

It's a welcome return for many who have counted on the program for announcements and to hear a familiar language on the radio ever since CBC began offering Indigenous language programming in the 1970s.

Malegana said and she's continuing to look for people who speak the language to join her on the show.

"Tusaavik means to hear and a place to hear," she said.

The one-hour program airs weekdays at 3 p.m. MT, broadcasting to communities in Nunavut and in Beaufort Delta communities in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.

If you'd like to tell a story, sing a song, participate in an interview or share language lesson, e-mail Dodie Malegana at dodie.malegana@cbc.ca.