Acknowledging and addressing past wrongs is key to advancing reconciliation and renewing the Inuit-Crown relationship.
Grab your blanket, your cocoa, your snuggler of choice – holiday movie season has arrived. Here's a rundown of the standard ...
A stray animal in Anchorage last month that looked a lot like a wolf but also like a dog was, in fact, a wolf hybrid, ...
"He tries to speak when he wants to engage someone in play, wants a treat, or doesn't get his way with the cat," Karly ...
WARNING: This story contains distressing details.Louisa Cookie-Brown was a young girl when she saw police officers shoot her ...
Fernando and Dana Ramirez of Rancho Luna Lobos recently visited Weilenmann School of Discovery. The couple, who conduct many school presentations each year, said their motivation for doing so was to ...
We need to be able to show that the “little brother” has recovered from his woes and has grown up, ready to be a driving ...
The federal government has apologized to Inuit communities in Nunavik for the mass slaughter of their sled dogs by RCMP ...
Two unidentified Inuit men on dog sled. During the 1950s and 1960s, sled dogs in Nunavik that weren't tied up were killed for ...
Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations Gary Anandasangaree has formally apologized to Inuit in Nunavik for the federal ...
The Canadian government officially apologized Saturday to an Indigenous community for the killing of several hundred sled dogs by police more than half a century ago.
Federal Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations Gary Anandasangaree travelled to Kangiqsujuaq in the Nunavik region to deliver the apology and promised C$45 million ($32.19 million) in compensation ...