The Avataq Cultural Institute is Nunavik's official organization for the preservation and promotion of the Inuktitut language and Inuit culture.[1][2] Avataq has departments that deal with ethnography and art, as well as a library, archive and language programs.[2]
History
Avataq receives its mandate from the biennial Inuit Elders Conference.[3] The Institute was formed at the first Inuit Elders Conference with the goal of protecting Inuit culture. It began operating on November 1, 1980.[4][5] Its head office is in Inukjuak[6][3] and it also operates an office in Montreal, Quebec.[7]
In 1984 Avataq supported a place-name survey of elders in 12 Inuit communities in the Quebec Arctic.[8][9]
Activities
In 2018 Avataq worked with Dartmouth College to return bones that had been excavated from Inuit gravesites in 1967 by one of the college's anthropologists.[10][11]
The Institute formed an alliance with the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts in 2018 to promote Inuit art and culture.[12]
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