Tusaayaksat Magazine – Winter 2019/20

Page 34

WORDS BY TYSON MISTAKEN-CHIEF

Naokah MistakenChief

Naokah (Ny-O-Ka) Mistaken Chief was born on November 3rd, 1979 in Inuvik, Northwest Territories. Her parents soon moved to Yellowknife, NT, where she was raised by her parents (Les Roth and Irene Roth). Naokah had a fairly normal childhood in Yellowknife but had frequently gone on the land with her parents. She said some of those memories of her on the land were the best. From junior high to the end of high school, she played volleyball. A year after she graduated, she spent a year in Spain for college. After that, she moved to Lethbridge, Alberta to finish off her college diploma in general studies; she also got a certificate in travel, tourism, and print journalism. That is when she met my dad (Dickie Mistaken

PROFILES WRITTEN BY ELA 30-2 STUDENTS AT EAST THREE SECONDARY SCHOOL

32

UKIUQ WINTER 2019

Chief)—while she was attending Lethbridge College. A few years later, my mom had her first child, which was me (Tyson Mistaken Chief ). By then she was living in Edmonton, AB, where her dad was living at the time with his new wife. 7 months later, I was born. They moved to Inuvik, NT, where they settled down to raise their child. 3 years later, she wanted another kid, so she they tried to conceive one but were unlucky. After a couple of months they decided to adopt. Lucky for Naokah, one of her distant cousins was pregnant and was unsure if she wanted to keep it. In July 2006, they were able to adopt the child, and on the 19th of July they welcomed their new baby daughter (Tatum Mistaken Chief—my sister). After she had children, she went to work with the department of lands as a lands officer (federal) in Inuvik. Naokah was married for around 13 years from 2001 to 2014. A few years later, Lands was turned into Territorial from Federal and her pay was cut. In 2017, she was offered a transfer to Yellowknife from the Lands Department, and in mid-summer of that year she accepted

the offer. By September, she and her two kids moved into her mother’s house by Great Slave Lake. The transfer was two years, but they offered an extension the summer of 2019— and she declined the offer. She was given her old job back in Inuvik and is currently working at Lands again. She is also helping me—her eldest child—as I am graduating this year. The reason why I did an interview with my mom is because she is one of the best people I know. I think her experiences of the North are pretty interesting. She is very active— going out on the land with her parents and kids. She goes visiting with people in town as much she can. When she is in a small town with a lot of her relatives, she does the most she can to visit them. That’s one of my favourite things about my mom—she tries so much to connect with the people in the communities and with the Elders to connect herself to the land. My mother is also very loving; she is never mean unless need be. This is why I picked my mom. She is very kind and respectful I could never ask for a better mother.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Heart Knowledge

2min
page 99

Home Time

1min
page 96

An Original Poem and Art Piece

1min
pages 90-91

maelstrom

1min
pages 94-95

Without Fur, We Would Not Exist

2min
pages 92-93

The Story of Agoolik

5min
pages 88-89

A LOOK BACK AT PROJECT SURNAME

9min
pages 82-87

Qilalukkat!

2min
pages 70-79

Qilalukkat!

6min
pages 70-81

Tuktuuyaqtuumin Ungavanun Ungasiktumun

4min
pages 58-69

From Tuk to the Global Stage

11min
pages 58-69

Getting a Head Start

14min
pages 51-57

An Unlikely Brotherhood

14min
pages 44-49

Taningnaq – Half-Inuvialuit, Half-White

10min
pages 39-43

James Rogers

1min
page 38

Charmaine Teddy

1min
page 38

Cameron Wolki-Jacobson

1min
page 37

Libby Macleod

1min
page 37

Shauna Gully

1min
page 36

Karen McDonald

1min
page 36

Cynthia Teddy

1min
page 35

Jacob Lennie

1min
page 35

Naokah Mistaken- Chief

2min
page 34

Davonna Kasook

5min
pages 32-33

Ryan Binder

7min
pages 28-31

Calysta Lucas-Kudlak

5min
pages 26-27

Mona Kudlak

3min
pages 22-25

Stephanie Nigiyok

3min
page 21

Mariah Lucas

2min
page 20

Tyee Fellows

3min
pages 18-19

Catherine Kuptana

2min
page 17

Janice McNutt

3min
page 16

Alyssa Carpenter

8min
pages 12-15

Must-have Winter Pieces

1min
pages 8-9

Heart Knowledge

2min
page 99

Home Time (2019)

1min
page 96

maelstrom

1min
pages 94-95

Real VS. Fake Fur

1min
page 93

Without Fur, We Would Not Exist

1min
page 92

Untitled

1min
pages 90-91

The Story of Agloolik

5min
pages 88-89

A Look Back at Project Surname

6min
pages 82-87

Tuktuuyaqtuumin Ungavanun Ungasiktumun

3min
pages 58-69

From Tuk to the Global Stage

11min
pages 58-69

Getting a Head Start

13min
pages 51-57

Inuvialuit Children's Books

1min
page 50

$300, a Bloody Jersey, and the Neatest Printing You’ll Ever See

14min
pages 44-49

Taningnaq: Half-Inuvialuit, Half-White

10min
pages 39-43

Profiles by East Three ELA 30-2 Students

13min
pages 34-38

Leading the Next Generation Into Politics—And the Future

5min
pages 32-33

The World Is Your Oyster

7min
pages 28-31

Supporting Youth in Sachs Harbour and Beyond

5min
pages 26-27

Making My Mark

3min
pages 22-25

We Are Never Alone

2min
page 21

Nourishing Stomachs and Nourishing Minds

1min
page 20

From Arctic Snow to Outer Space

3min
pages 18-19

Crafting Culture and Care

2min
page 17

Finding My Identity and Reclaiming My Culture

3min
page 16

Empowering Myself By Empowering Youth

7min
pages 12-15

Nutaat Inuit: New People

3min
pages 6-7

Shine a Light

2min
page 4

Qilalukkat! Inuvialuillu: Tamapta Inuusiqput

1min
pages 70-81

Qilalukkat! Belugas and Inuvialuit: Our Survival Together

6min
pages 70-81
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.